All posts by Ian

Comic Timing – Episode 46: Part 2

Part 2 is here! In this part, we go through all the forum comments, and make some further comments on Comic Books: 20 Years From Now. Give it a listen, and on Saturday if all things go right, expect an episode recorded live from the room at CGS 300!

E-mail us at comictiming@gmail.com, and vote for us on Podcast Alley and Digg us at Digg.Com.

Seeya soon, and thanks for downloading!

Comic Timing – Episode 46: Part 1

Part 1 of Episode 46 is here! Heath Holland of Geek Brunch, Juan De Jesus of Geeks Unite, Brent Kossina and I go into where we think comic books are heading 20 Years From Now. Next week, Part 2 will be released with forum comments and further discussion. Then a few days after that, we will be releasing an episode live from CGS 300!

As always, you can e-mail us at comictiming@gmail.com, and please vote for us on Podcast Alley and Digg us at Digg.Com if you have the time.

Until next week, thanks for listening and thanks for downloading!

Comic Timing – Episode 45

Episode 45 is here! Brandon Christopher joins Brent, Raph, and I, as we discuss legacy heroes. That is, replacements for long established heroes. Do they work? What are our favorites and who do we dislike? We do it all here!

You can e-mail the show at comictiming@gmail.com, and please vote for us on Podcast Alley and Digg us at Digg.Com.

Hope everyone has a great Labor Day, and thanks for listening and downloading!

Comic Timing – Episode 44

Episode 44 has arrived, even if it was recorded the day the Skype died. Thanks to GoogleTalk, we were able to get something going. In this episode, we pay tribute to Mike Wieringo, discuss Alex Ross’ latest project, go over the Dark Knight photos released to the internet, Jamal Igle leaving Nightwing, the Superboy litigation, and a whole lot more. We this episode equals the regular crew of Brent Kossina, Raph Soohoo, and myself. Good times, and please bear with the few moments of audio problems.

As always, you can e-mail the show at comictiming@gmail.com, or you can leave a voicemail at to 1-888-654-2278, or if you’re outside the US, +1-305-437-8719. Then enter the phone number, 646-496-6848, followed by the Pin, 1234. You can also vote for us at Podcast Alley or Digg us at Digg.Com.

The long awaited Comic Books: 20 Years Later episode will be out next week, so until then, thanks for listening, and thanks for downloading!

Comic Timing – Episode 43: SDCC 07 Wrap-Up

John Mayo, Bob Bretall, Julian Lytle and I give our take on The 2007 San Diego Comic-Con. We cover all five days in depth, so get ready for some good times! Also included are interview segments from the con with John Mayo, Hannah Lee from the forums, Kevin Freeman of APE Entertainment, Peter David, and Aaron Williams of P.S. 238. Also, make sure to stick around til the end, as John has an announcement that will make a bunch of you happy. Thanks to everybody who participated in this one, as I had a blast!

By the way, if you are looking for a Jaimie Madrox shirt, you can find it at Mutant-America.com.

If you have anything to say about this one, send an e-mail over to comictiming@gmail.com, and please vote for us on Podcast Alley and Digg us over at Digg.Com.

Until next time, thanks for listening, thanks for downloading, and I hope to see you folks at next year at SDCC 2008!

Comic Timing Syndication – Podcasting: One Year Later Panel

This is the Podcasting: One Year Later panel that was conducted on Thursday at the 2007 San Diego Comic-Con. On the panel were myself, John Mayo of Comic Book Page, John Towry of Comic Talk Cafe, Mr. Phil of Indie Spinner Rack, Josh from iFanboy, Scott Hinze of Fanboy Radio, and Jimmy Aquino of Comic News Insider. The panel was moderated by Vito Delsante, a freelance writer for DC Comics and manager of Jim Hanleys Universe in New York.

I boosted the volume of the recording as high as it could go without sounding too distorted, so I hope you are able to hear it all without trouble. The panel was plenty of fun, and I certainly want to thank my fellow panelists for the great time. Our wrap-up of San Diego Comic-Con will be released in another day or two, so keep your eyes and ears open.

Thanks for listening, thanks for downloading, and hope to talk to you folks soon!

Comic Timing Syndication – BK Bullets: Flash #13

Another syndicated episode! On this one, Brent Kossina and I do a BKs Bullets for Raging Bullets, all about Flash #13. We also touch on the Justice League of America #10 reveal a bit, and go a few other places too. This will air on Raging Bullets this upcoming Friday, on Episode 49 Part2b, so make sure to listen to it to hear Sean and Jim and their take on our comments. I will be in San Diego for Comic-Con this week, hence the syndicated episode. Next week, expect a wrap-up episode of SDCC, possibly with John Mayo and some interviews from the con floor. Plus, I included a blooper conversation at the end of the episode from the original recording session as an added bonus.

As always, you can e-mail us at comictiming@gmail.com, and please vote for us on Podcast Alley and Digg us at Digg.Com.

Until next week, thanks for listening, and thanks for downloading!

Comic Timing – Episode 42: Host Reversal

For the first time in a long time, Ian Levenstein is not the host of Comic Timing! No, I did not hand the reigns over to someone else, and no, I am not absent from this episode. We just decided to do something different. Brent Kossina hosts this episode, as Raph Soohoo and I discuss the MoCCA Festival in all its glory. Plus, we touch on the 2nd DC Teaser image for Countdown, go through a little bit of Flash #13 (slight spoilers), and we play Americas favorite game show: WHO THE HECK IS A SKRULL?!?!

This episode is barely edited as I had to pack for my glorious trip to Otakon, but when I listened to it we managed to sound pretty good, in my honest opinion. If you have any questions or comments, you can e-mail Comic Timing at comictiming@gmail.com, and please vote for us on Podcast Alley and Digg us at Digg.Com.

Also, please send in your audio comments on where you think the comic industry will be in 20 years! We will be more than happy to hear from you.

Thanks for listening, thanks for downloading, and we will see you folks soon.

Comic Timing – Episode 41

Episode 41 of Comic Timing hits! Well, hopefully it hits. If it flops, I will be a sad panda. Brent Kossina, Raph Soohoo, and myself review Marvel Comics latest foray into movie land, Fantastic Four: Rise of the Silver Surfer. This episode is jam-packed with comments, both positive and negative, on the film, and what we would like to see in FF3. Give it a listen, and if you have not seen it yet, check out the movie in theaters!

After the credits and the typical bloopers are a bunch of very off-topic segments I felt had to be included. In them, we do a bit of discussion on Flash #13 and Justice League of America #10, so there will be spoilers there. And of course, we spoil the FF movies, because that makes sense!

As always, you can e-mail the show at comictiming@gmail.com, and please vote for us at Podcast Alley and Digg us on Digg.Com.

We will be back next weeek with our wrap up of the MoCCA Festival, plus some Marvel and DC News. Until then, thanks for listening, and thanks for downloading!

Early Review: Warren Ellis Crooked Little Vein

I received a preview copy of the first ever Warren Ellis novel, “Crooked Little Vein,” last month. The following is my review of the title. Expect a fuller review as a Special Episode of Comic Timing in the near future.

Crooked Little Vein

Of all the authors I have grown to appreciate in the world of comic books, Warren Ellis is in a world all his own. The thoughts that come into this man’s head are not those of the average writer. Up until now, his ideas have been limited to the comic book medium, where pictures accompanied his words. We knew exactly what he wanted us to see, because it was right there for us. With “Crooked Little Vein,” things are a bit more difficult. Now we have nothing but words to accompany his story. Did it make a difference in his storytelling ability? Not in the slightest. His descriptions, no matter how obscene, are enough for the reader to know exactly what he is talking about. Of course, it would not be a Warren Ellis affair without a main character you can relate to, throughout all of his flaws and character traits. Michael McGill, private investigator, hero to no one, is a putz at times, but he is our putz. His life is a myriad of mistakes, all brought together into the epic search for the missing U.S. Constitution.

Mike seems to care very little about actually getting the book back, just as long as there is compensation. Along the way, he meets the dregs of society, and you see just what this country could be if we were skewed just a teensy bit further to the side of corruption. Is Warren Ellis writing an exaggeration of our current society, or is he writing a truth few of us wish to admit is reality? The chief of staff gives him his mission in order to bring the United States, and possibly the world, back to a simpler time. But by what means? Is it ever right to force people to become something they are not, when even the highest up in the political world seem to suffer from the same lack of morals? Are we better off with freedom, or with “freedom?” Good question.

I believe that choice is up to the reader to decide; either way you go, the book is exceptional, and will have you chomping at the bit to read as much as possible, until you are at the final page. The book left me with one thought in my head: let the absurd ring true. Take all of Ellis’ former works, throw them in a bucket, stir vigorously, and you get “Crooked Little Vein.” It was everything I love about his style and more, and I will be first in line to read his next novel, whenever that may arrive.