SCENE: ANGIE'S APARTMENT.
ANGIE scans the telephone directory
ANGIE
Good I kept this old phone directory. Let's see here... H....J...N...What would he be listed, under? Duh! I'm so dense! Logically, has'ta be under boat building. If only I could remember the name of his company. The Ark Store? Try that. Good a name as any. Nope - not listed. How about...Arks for All... This is ridiculous. They're a gazillion possibilities. Maybe he gave up his land phone, which would make this search an exercise in futility. Should have been nicer to him. I mean, he is old and all and meant well I suppose...and he did introduce me to a decent guy even though it didn't work out...What did I do in return in the way of thanks? Told him to take his ark and...
Phone rings. ANGIE answers
ANGIE
Hello?
She hears heavy breathing
ANGIE (cont'd.)
Anybody there?
Still more heavy breathing
ANGIE
Do we have us a pervert, here? Really, your type are so obvious. Disgusting, vile, dregs of the earth...
NOAH
Guess who?
ANGIE
...sewer slime... Noah? That you?
NOAH
Bad cold...
(he sneezes and coughs)
ANGIE
Good that you stopped me. I was about to direct some very bad language at what I thought was one of those heavy breather pieces of garbage that pollute the earth...
NOAH
(sneezes)
I understand you were trying to reach me?
ANGIE
I misplaced your number and was trying to touch base with you again, but how did you know?
NOAH
(coughing)
Let's just say that - (sneezes) -
ANGIE
...bless you...
NOAH
I am that. As I was saying...I have connections. What's up?
ANGIE
I've been thinking things over and - well - perhaps I've been too rash in my judgement of your project
NOAH
(coughing and blowing his nose)
As I recall in our last conversation, you made it clear that you didn't want to hear from me ever again
ANGIE
That was then. This is now. Sometimes my mouth gets the better of me and things roll out of my mouth that I don't mean
NOAH
As in?
ANGIE
Not giving you the benefit of the doubt and questioning your authenticity. I should have trusted in you but nooooo... Instead I gave you your walking papers or in this case, your sailing papers...
NOAH
Are you trying to say you've re-considered helping me rebuild the ark?
ANGIE
You got it - if you'll have me
NOAH
How do I know that you won't lose interest like before. Time is marching on and bad weather is just around the corner.
ANGIE
Let's just say that I've come to the realization that there are more important things in life than finding mister right
NOAH
(sneezing repeatedly)
No time like the present to get back to work.
ANGIE
Where do we start?
NOAH
There are some conditions, though
ANGIE
I knew it was too good to be true
NOAH
Nothing that you can't handle
ANGIE
Like?
NOAH
Your duties will include keeping the interior of the ark clean, when it's built of course
ANGIE
You have to be joking. All those animals...
NOAH
I'm not finished. You will also have to play the roll of peace maker
(NOAH sneezes)
ANGIE
Bless you!
NOAH
I am
ANGIE
But...there are so many species. How do I communicate with them?
NOAH
Darn if I know but I have every confidence you'll find a way. Time is marching on and there's a lot to do. I'll send Roger to come pick you up
ANGIE
Would this be the male representation to me? I better wash my hair...and pick my wardrobe to take with me...don't want to give a first bad impression...
NOAH
Really - Roger doesn't care about those things
ANGIE
Has he seen a photo of me, perchance?
NOAH
I did show him the one that we took together. Roger never forgets a face
ANGIE
Oh really?
NOAH
I'm sending him over to pick you up. He should be there in ten minutes.
ANGIE
Hello...? Noah...? Better get dressed for the occasion. Want to make a good impression
(Ten minutes later the doorbell rings. ANGIE opens the door)
ANGIE (cont'd)
Just a minute...com-ing! I've heard so much about you...
(Angie opens the door and jumps back)
ANGIE (cont'd.)
You're...Roger?
(TO BE CONTINUED)
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Blog: A. PLAYWRIGHT'S RAMBLINGS (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: the flood, playette, phone call, Arks to Go: the Flood II, comedy cyber soap opera, humor, comedy, water, Noah, Add a tag
Blog: Manga Maniac Cafe (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Review, Graphic Novel, Manga, Romance, Comedy, Viz, Actress, Manga / Comics, Shoujo, Add a tag
May Contain Spoilers
Review:
Holy Cow! Sometimes I just have to get that off my chest. The 25th volume of Skip*Beat! ROCKED! The drama was cranked up when Sho made a surprise appearance during the filming of Kyoko and Ren’s TV show and WOW! He really knows how to stir up trouble. And best yet, how to get under Kyoko’s skin. Jealous when he thought that she was hung up on Reino, a rival singer, Sho wanted to make sure Kyoko knew what she was missing. Delivering a huge bouquet brimming with all the things he thought she’d love, he throws down the gauntlet. He’ll not be overshadowed by the Beagle or by smarmy Ren, either!
When Sho steals Kyoko’s first kiss, hilarity ensues. She is distraught, Ren is quivering with rage, and poor Yashiro – he can only look on in horror as his client’s sense of well-being is shattered into a billion tiny pieces. I didn’t know who I felt worse for – Ren, Kyoko, or Yashiro, who would have to deal with the fallout from Ren’s state of agitation. Kyoko is traumatized, until Ren scoffs at her reaction to Sho. If she wasn’t a willing participant in the kiss, is it really a kiss? Besides, she’s an actress, and there will be times when she’ll have to kiss a co-star. That’s not a kiss, either, it’s just part of the script, and part of the job. Just when he’s made her feel better about the whole episode, Ren works in a little threat; she needs to be careful to never let Sho take advantage of her again, because she only gets one chance. There will be no second chances. Oh, dear!
Later, when Kyoko is alone in Ren’s dressing room, he does something to push Sho completely out of her mind. Literally. Suddenly, she can only think of Ren, and don’t think that doesn’t make him all smug and extremely self-satisfied. Valentine’s Day was so much fun, I was sorry to see it end. This has been my favorite volume of Skip*Beat! so far, and I wonder if it can be topped. Even the art was kicked up a notch, but that impression might be due to the amount of illustrations featuring Ren.
Grade: A-
Review copy purchased from Amazon
From Amazon:
Kyoko’s Valentine’s battle with Reino has finally gained her Sho’s attention—but now it’s the last thing she wants! Sho is determined to make her obsessed with him, and shows up on set with an over-the-top gift to taunt her. But when Kyoko explains her true relationship with Reino, Sho makes an inexcusable move. Has he undone her years of healing in one fell swoop?!
The post Graphic Novel Review: Skip*Beat! Volume 25 by Yoshiki Nakamura appeared first on Manga Maniac Cafe.
Add a CommentBlog: (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Comedy, Manga Reviews, Seven Seas, Seinen, manga review, D-Frag!, Tomoya Haruno, Add a tag
Title: D-Frag! Genre: Comedy Publisher: Media Factory (JP), Seven Seas (US) Artist: Tomoya Haruno Serialized in: Monthly Comic Alive Translation: Adrienne Beck Original Release Date: August 5, 2014 I follow a very simple rule when it comes to reading comedy manga: if I’m laughing because it’s legitimately funny instead of laughing while making up scenarios ... Read more
Blog: Manga Maniac Cafe (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Review, Graphic Novel, Romance, Comedy, Viz, Manga / Comics, Add a tag
May Contain Spoilers
Review:
Valentine’s Day seems like a complicated occasion in Japan. It’s no wonder it gave Kyoko so much trouble in the 24th volume of Skip*Beat! Her interactions between the men in life are confusing to say the least. There’s Sho, who tromped on her heart but now reluctantly harbors feelings for her, and Reino, the lead singer of a rival band of Sho’s, who stalked her and now that he’s captured one of Kyoko’s grudges, is demanding chocolates made with “her true feelings” from him before he’ll return what he’s stolen from her. And then there’s Ren. Ren. Ren! The guy who has gone out of his way to help her navigate the cut-throat world of show biz, but does she give even the slightest regard for his feelings? No. No. No! Sigh. Kyoko, you need to worry more about the people who care about you because of who you are, and less about those who only want to manipulate you.
I loved this volume of Yoshiki Nakamura’s comedy romance. It’s funny. Kyoko makes a muddle of Valentine’s Day, and Sho is driven to misery when he thinks that Kyoko likes Reino. I wasn’t so happy when Ren thought Kyoko liked someone else after dropping the chocolates she made with every bit of hate she possessed for the Beagle, or when she skipped around the movie set giving everyone obligation chocolates – everyone but him. At least she gave him a birthday present, belated though it was, so I think Ren should cut her some slack. Anyone who knows Kyoko well knows that she’s kind of a spaz. What they don’t all know is that after Sho left her heart full of holes, she swore off love and guys, so because she’s not looking for a relationship, she doesn’t see the possibility for one when it’s standing right in front of her. She is blinded by her need to have her revenge, and to silence all of her little grudge Kyoko’s.
I love how this storyline sets up all kinds of opportunities for misunderstandings between, not just Ren and Kyoko, but between Kyoko and Sho, and even Kyoko and Reino. I think that Kyoko’s personal, as well as professional life, is going to get very, very complicated, and I can hardly wait to see what happens next!
Grade: B+
Review copy purchased from Amazon
From Amazon:
Valentine’s Day is on its way, but Kyoko won’t be able to celebrate love and friendship the normal way. She’s getting blackmailed into giving chocolate to guys she hates, she has her ongoing revenge to oblige, and to top it all off, it’s Ren’s birthday! How can Kyoko give him a meaningful present when she’s slinging meaningless chocolate left and right?
The post Graphic Novel Review: Skip*Beat! Volume 24 by Yoshiki Nakamura appeared first on Manga Maniac Cafe.
Add a CommentBlog: OUPblog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: laughter, comedy, Very Short Introductions, comedian, *Featured, Baudelaire, derision, joking, VSI, Plato, Socrates, ridicule, Matthew Bevis, Books, History, Add a tag
The following is an extract from Comedy: A Very Short Introduction, by Matthew Bevis. It explores the relationship between laughter and aggression.
‘Laughter is men’s way of biting,’ Baudelaire proclaimed. The sociologist Norbert Elias offered a rejoinder: ‘He who laughs cannot bite.’ So does laughter embody or diffuse aggression? One theory, offered by the neuroscientist Vilayanur Ramachandran, is that the laugh may be an aborted cry of concern, a way of announcing to a group that there has been a false alarm. The smile could operate in a similar way: when one of our ancestral primates saw another individual from a distance, he perhaps initially bared his canines as a threatening grimace before recognizing the individual as friend, not foe. So his grimace was abandoned halfway to produce a smile, which in turn may have evolved into a ritualized human greeting. Another researcher, Robert Provine, notes that chimp laughter is commonly triggered by physical contact (biting or tickling) or by the threat of such contact (chasing games) and argues that the ‘pant-pant’ of apes and the ‘ha-ha’ of humans evolved from the breathlessness of physical play. This, together with the show of teeth necessitated by the play face, has been ritualized into the rhythmic pant of the laugh. Behind the smile, then, may lie a socialized snarl; and behind the laugh, a play fight. But behind both of these facial expressions lie real snarls and real fights.
People often claim to be ‘only joking’, but many a true word is spoken in jest. Ridicule and derision are both rooted in laughter (from ridere, to laugh). The comic may loiter with shady intent on the borders of aggression; ‘a joke’, Aristotle suggested, ‘is a kind of abuse’. And comedy itself can be abused as well as used—racist and sexist jokes point to its potential cruelty. As Waters says of Price’s stand-up act in Trevor Griffiths’s The Comedians (1975): ‘Love, care, concern, call it what you like, you junked it over the side.’ Comedy is clearly at home in the company of insults, abuse, curses, and diatribes, but the mode can also lend an unusual inflection to these utterances. From Greek iambi to the licensed raillery of the Roman Saturnalia, from Pete and Dud on the implications of being called a fucking cunt to the game of The Dozens, in which numerous aspersions are cast upon Yo Mama’s character, something strange happens to aggression when it is stylized or performed. W. H. Auden pondered choreographed exchanges of insult—from Old English flyting to the modern-day exchanges of truck drivers— and observed that ‘the protagonists are not thinking about each other but about language and their pleasure in employing it inventively … Playful anger is intrinsically comic because, of all emotions, anger is the least compatible with play.’ From this perspective, comedy is the moment at which outrage becomes outrageous. Some kinds of ferocity can be delectable.
‘Playful anger’ sounds like a contradiction in terms, yet in Plato’s Philebus, Socrates notes ‘the curious mixture of pleasure and pain that lies in the malice of amusement’. Descartes suggests in The Passions of The Soul (1649) that ‘Derision or scorn is a sort of joy mingled with hatred.’ This chapter examines such curious mixtures and minglings of feeling by considering modes of comedy that seem to have a target in their sights—versions of satire, mock-heroic, parody, and caricature. We might turn first to the satirist; Walter Benjamin identified him as ‘the figure in whom the cannibal was received into civilization’. So the satirist is at once savage and civilized; he cuts us up after having been granted permission (perhaps even encouraged) to take that liberty. What is it, then, that we need this cannibal to do for us? The satirist, it would initially appear, is the comedian who allows audiences to join him on a mission. Satire is a scourge of vice, a spur to virtue; Horace imagines his ideal listener as ‘baring his teeth in a grin’. So far so good, but the listener may also get bitten from time to time: ‘What are you laughing at?’ the poet asks us, ‘Change the name and you are the subject of the story.’ Indeed, as Hamlet would later quip, ‘use every man after his desert, and who should scape whipping?’
Image credit: Business team laughing, © YanC, via iStock Photo.
The post Biting, whipping, tickling appeared first on OUPblog.
Blog: Death Books and Tea (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: comedy, tragedy, lysistrata, strength 4, theatre review, Add a tag
Blog: Death Books and Tea (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: strength 5, theatre review, comedy, coming of age, musicals, Add a tag
Blog: An Awfully Big Blog Adventure (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Nicola Morgan, events and school visits, The Teenage Guide to Stress, Chicken Friend, comedy, Add a tag
Don't get me wrong: humour is an essential part of life and wellbeing. The ability to make an audience laugh is a laudable one. When kids come out of an author visit still laughing, the endorphins fizzing round their brains, it's a happy result indeed. It's visibly A Success.
But authors should not feel they have to "do funny" and I wouldn't like schools to fall into the trap of thinking that the only engaged audience is one falling off its chairs with laughter. I say this because I've seen children's authors recently worry that their events aren't "funny enough" and comparing themselves unfavourably with talented comic authors and speakers.
We should not forget that not everyone always wants to be made to laugh; not everyone laughs at the same things; and some people have different needs. I, for one, given the choice between an hour of laughter and an hour of having my heart and mind spun dizzy with new ideas or shocked into a new groove by fresh images and stories, would opt for dizzy or shocked. And I was always like that. Doesn't mean I don't have a sense of humour or like laughing, just that they are not at the top of my priority list. They are fairly high up it, but not at the top. I know I'm not alone.
If our books don't feature pants, slime or slapstick, our talks may not lend themselves to funny. I've written funny - and in my talks on Chicken Friend, yes, it was great to see the kids laughing when I chose the funny bits to read, though I preferred the more thoughtful bits, the bits where my main character really struggled with things in her world. But my YA novels are far from funny. A mastectomy without anaesthetic isn't funny; nor is being stalked; nor is mental illness or alcoholism. Even my talks on the teenage brain - which some adults might say, unjokingly, was a genuine comedic mine - only look for the occasional release of laughter. And that's usually when I quote Shakespeare.
She didn't want to laugh about her stress - even though laughing about serious things is no bad thing. She wanted her mind to be "settled". A book and a talk should do whatever they should do: inspire laughter or excitement or thoughts or emotions or resolution, whatever.
Today, I'm heading to Gordonstoun for two days of almost entirely unfunny events. However, I will at one point wear a knitted brain on my head (thanks, Cat!) and I can pretty much guarantee that people will laugh. That's fine. Especially since the brief laughter will flood their brains with chemicals which will make them better able to absorb the serious stuff.
But the value of an event is not measured in the decibels of laughter. If you set out to be funny, then it is, of course; if you set out to be thought-provoking, you might measure it in the silence and stillness. Or in the chatter afterwards. Or in a single question or email. Measure it how you like but don't be overwhelmed by the hegemony of humour.
So, to my fellow authors planning events: you do not have to wear your pants (or a knitted brain) on your head. Just wear your best ones.
The Teenage Guide to Stress is published on July 3rd by Walker Books. It's not funny so don't laugh.
Blog: RabbleBoy (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: comic, comedy, Press, slice of life, web comics, drama, Free Stuff, webcomic, Void, crowdfunding, tapastic, patreon, david daneman, the danemen, Add a tag
If you’ve ever perused the online web comic community Tapastic.com, you’re sure to have seen the slice of life webcomic “The Danemen” featuring the DaneMan himself. The silent (word-less) comic transcends language through the use of visual queues that brings drama and comedy to the viewer. It’s like watching a classic Chaplin act and waiting for the finale, which never disappoints and is almost always unexpected.
In the video below, David shows us his work process and how it defines his unique style. Make sure to take notes, and don’t forget to support his Patreon campaign so he can make comics until the end of days!
http://www.patreon.com/DaneMen
Add a Comment
Blog: RabbleBoy (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Videos, animation, comedy, robot, 3d, desire, rob fetters, vimeo, Add a tag
A small robot is born and sets out into the world, happily performing his simple tasks. Suddenly, in a small but profound way, the world as he knows it changes. What follows is a downward spiral of jealousy, resentment and unrestrained desire.
This animated musical short features Rob Fetters’ pop-rock gem, “Desire.” Story, Direction and Animation by Scott Thierauf. Sound Design and Creative Collaboration by Grant Kattmann, Editorial by Theresa Bruce, and Color Grade by Chris Joecken. ©2014 Red Echo Post redechopost.com robfetters.net
“Desire” from the album “Saint Ain’t” available on iTunes:
itunes.apple.com/us/album/saint-aint/id774318896
itunes.apple.com/us/album/desire/id774318896?i=774319030
DESIRE – The Animated Musical Short from Scott Thierauf on Vimeo.
Add a CommentBlog: A. PLAYWRIGHT'S RAMBLINGS (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: humor, comedy, play, continuing story, add to the dialogue, arks, Arks to Go - the sequel, Add a tag
Blog: A. PLAYWRIGHT'S RAMBLINGS (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Dead Writes, play excerpt, comedy, playwright, playwriting, newspaper, reporter, Add a tag
Now and then - more then than now unfortunately - I actually work on plays yet to be finished. One of my favorites (don't I always say that?) is "Dead Writes" started a while back. A comedy, the story line focuses on a deceased, crusty old reporter (Felicia) who has to earn her way into the heavenly quarters by offering her experience and guidance to Chloe, a young up-and-coming writer.
In this is an excerpt, which takes place somewhere between heaven and hell, Felicia is explained how things work and given the guidelines to her assignment. My apologies regarding the formatting transferring the contents from Word.
SCENE 111
FELICIA
JOSIAH
JOSIAH
FELICIA
JOSIAH
JOSIAH
FELICIA
JOSIAH
FELICIA
JOSIAH
FELICIA
JOSIAH
FELICIA
JOSIAH
FELICIA
JOSIAH
There are gates everywhere, but you can't see them since you're not ready to enter. Hopefully, you'll earn your way through. Consider this place a sort-of… holding position. May I have Felicia Pembroke's review
FELICIA
SFX: THUNDERCLAP
JOSIAH
FELICIA
FELICIA
JOSIAH
FELICIA
JOSIAH
FELICIA
JOSIAH
FELICIA
JOSIAH
FELICIA
JOSIAH
FELICIA
JOSIAH
FELICIA
JOSIAH
FELICIA
JOSIAH
FELICIA
JOSIAH
FELICIA takes JOSIAH's hand
FELICIA
JOSIAH
Remember that nobody can see or hear you except me, and soon young Chloe there will be privy to your voice
FELICIA
SFX: Loud thunder-clap
CHLOE
FELICIA
CHLOE
(whirling around)
FELICIA
CHLOE
FELICIA
Blog: (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Tv, television, humor, Comedy, entertainment, small town, laugh, sitcoms, It Made Me Laugh, Add a tag
When did they make the last truly funny show? Has there been anything funny created in two decades or are they simply repeating the same thirty minute plotlines with different characters? The real question is, are they still using the same crazy laugh track from I Love Lucy and The Andy Griffith show? We are […]
Blog: Death Books and Tea (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: book review, comedy, contemporary, strength 4, geek girl, holly smale, model misfit, Add a tag
Blog: A. PLAYWRIGHT'S RAMBLINGS (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: humor, comedy, play, playwriting, plumber, Becky, Lyle, "Gin: an Allegory for Playing the Game of Life"; play excerpt, blocked drain, Add a tag
LYLE
This band is like… fab-u-lo-so… We'll try chemicals first and if that don't work, we'll use the snake
BECKY
Blog: Death Books and Tea (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: strength 2, last god standing, book review, fantasy, mythology, comedy, Add a tag
Blog: Manga Maniac Cafe (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Manga, Press Releases, Comedy, Viz, Press Release, Manga / Comics, Shifters, Add a tag
{ED – And this, folks, is the series that started it all for me. If you enjoy comedy, martial arts, and gender-bending hijinks, give it a spin. Just prep at for a long ride, because this manga ran forever!}
VIZ MEDIA INVITES FANS TO CATCH THE EXCITING RETURN OF RANMA ½ IN A BRAND NEW OMNIBUS MANGA EDITION
Creator Rumiko Takahashi’s Groundbreaking
Gender-Bending Martial Arts Comedy Returns To North America In A Newly Re-Mastered 2-In-1 Manga Format
San Francisco, CA, February 28, 2014 – The wait is almost over as VIZ Media, LLC (VIZ Media), the largest distributor and licensor of anime and manga in North America, announces next month’s exciting release of Rumiko Takahashi’s adored manga (graphic novel) series – RANMA ½ – as newly re-mastered 2-in-1 omnibus editions. The opening volume debuts on March 11th, presented for the first time ever in a right-to-left reading format that remains faithful to the original work. RANMA ½ is rated ‘T+’ for Older Teens and will carry a MSRP of $14.99 U.S. / $16.99 CAN.
Ranma Saotome never thought a martial arts training mission to China would turn out like this! Due to an unfortunate accident at the cursed Chinese training ground Jusenkyo, when Ranma and his father get splashed with cold water, papa turns into a giant panda and male Ranma becomes a buxom young woman! Hot water reverses the effect, but only until the next time! Constantly chased by battle-happy martial artists and lovesick suitors of both sexes, what’s a half-boy, half-girl martial artist to do?
“RANMA ½ was one of the first manga series to achieve massive international success, and became a staple of the VIZ Media catalog for over 14 years, making it one of our longest-running titles and one of the longest-running manga series in North America,” says Hope Donovan, Editor. “The return of RANMA ½ in a new 2-in-1 omnibus is an ideal format to revisit the series or enjoy it for the very first time and will allow fans to appreciate Rumiko Takahashi’s classic romantic comedy action series in a whole new way!”
The spotlight on Rumiko Takahashi’s career began in 1978 when she won an honorable mention in Shogakukan’s prestigious New Comic Artist Contest for Those Selfish Aliens. Later that same year, her boy-meets-alien comedy series, Urusei Yatsura, was serialized in Weekly Shonen Sunday. This phenomenally successful manga series was adapted into anime format and spawned a TV series and half a dozen theatrical-release movies, all incredibly popular in their own right. Takahashi followed up the success of her debut series with one blockbuster hit after another— Maison Ikkoku ran from 1980 to 1987, Ranma 1/2 from 1987 to 1996, and Inuyasha from 1996 to 2008. Other notable works include Mermaid Saga, Rumic Theater, One-Pound Gospel, and RIN-NE (all also published in North America by VIZ Media).
Takahashi won the Shogakukan Manga Award twice in her career, once for Urusei Yatsura in 1981 and the second time for Inuyasha in 2002. A majority of the Takahashi canon has been adapted into other media such as anime, live-action TV series, and film. Takahashi’s manga, as well as the other formats her work has been adapted into, have continued to delight generations of fans around the world. Distinguished by her wonderfully endearing characters, Takahashi’s work adeptly incorporates a wide variety of elements such as comedy, romance, fantasy, and martial arts. While her series are difficult to pin down into one simple genre, the signature style she has created has come to be known as the “Rumic World.” Rumiko Takahashi is an artist who truly represents the very best from the world of manga.
For more information on RANMA ½ and Rumiko Takahashi titles published by VIZ Media, please visit www.VIZ.com.
About VIZ Media, LLC
Headquartered in San Francisco, California, VIZ Media distributes, markets and licenses the best anime and manga titles direct from Japan. Owned by three of Japan’s largest manga and animation companies, Shueisha Inc., Shogakukan Inc., and Shogakukan-Shueisha Productions, Co., Ltd., VIZ Media has the most extensive library of anime and manga for English speaking audiences in North America, the United Kingdom, Ireland and South Africa. With its popular digital manga anthology WEEKLY SHONEN JUMP and blockbuster properties like NARUTO, BLEACH and INUYASHA, VIZ Media offers cutting-edge action, romance and family friendly properties for anime, manga, science fiction and fantasy fans of all ages. VIZ Media properties are available as graphic novels, DVDs, animated television series, feature films, downloadable and streaming video and a variety of consumer products.
Add a CommentBlog: From the land of Empyrean (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: friends, respect, comedy, amish, understanding, cozy mystery, amish fiction, slapstick, Add a tag
The newest offering of the Defective Amish Detective is available now! You can get Vol 6: The Sausage Log Implosion on Kindle here: http://amz.to/11MckpP
I have to say this whole experience has been a lot of fun. When Giovanni approached me about this series, I was a little hesitant. I have always known him to have an outrageous sense of humor and I knew the Amish were handled with a great deal of respect. I did not know how we would blend the two.
What came out of it was a story with lots of heart and its own kind of zaniness. I think we manage to show the proper amount of respect to the Amish. Much of the slapstick falls on the Defective Detective, who is not Amish. What is he? Something of a repentant hitman. Both of our main characters have mysterious pasts that give them unique skills to handle the cozy mysteries we throw at them.
In the end, this series is about friendship and understanding. It is about two men coming from two different worlds and overcoming their differences to work together for the greater good. It is a pleasure to write and I hope you have as much fun reading it!
About The Sausage Log Implosion: “Muck is Muck,” Eli the Blacksmith says.How does the Defective Detective go from having a near perfect day to one of the worst? Simple – someone stole his sausage log. Everyone has something in life that makes them happy. For G, it is the culinary delights of the Amish, including whoopie pies and sausage logs. When his favorite market is sold out, G wants to know why. The charming, but innocent, counter girl tells him that the butcher’s meat grinder has been stolen. When something goes awry in Amish Country, G can’t let it go. He joins his stalwart companion Eli and the two of them are on the case. They have two questions to answer. What happened to the meat grinder? And, how much muck is too much muck? This is one explosive implosion!
Blog: A. PLAYWRIGHT'S RAMBLINGS (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: playwright, playwriting, BBC International Playwriting Competition, The Lemon, comedy, radio, play, Add a tag
Go figure. Here I was under the impression that the BBC International Playwriting Competition was on hold or cancelled altogether. Much to my surprise, read on Facebook to stand by since they are about to announce the details of this year's competition.
While this is great news and under the assumption that the competition was cancelled, I've been re-thinking entering "Old Soldiers" as my entry.
"After all that waiting - you're going to abandon us?" Joe would probably ask. The issue is whether or not 'soldiers would be radio-friendly due to the necessity of sound effects.
A while back, I wrote a short play entitled, "The Lemon" focusing on the trials and tribulatiion of a female owning and trying to unload her car, which as the title infers, is a "lemon." A comedy, it's a fun story line and the characters would lend themselves to radio. At present it would run about 20-30 minutes but it wouldn't be difficult to add to the story.
This week I'm going to re-examine The Lemon with a critical eye to see if and how the story can be expanded. Meanwhile, I'm waiting for the announcement of the new deadline. Progress reports to come.
Blog: PW -The Beat (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: stand-up comedy, Angry Bob, Jeffrey Burandt, Trip City, Two Beards One Heart, Billy Dogma, Americans UK, Awful George, Jef UK, Katharine Heller, Meghan Turbitt, Molly Knefel, Night Job, Rev Jen's Anti-Slam, Reverend Jen, Street Code, Tommy Rocket, Union Hall, webcomix, News, Music, Comics, Comix, politics, Comedy, Brooklyn, Dean Haspiel, indie music, Indie Comics, Digital Comics, Top News, Add a tag
On March 21st 2013 at the Union Hall bar, restaurant, and music venue in Park Slope, Brooklyn, comics creator and TRIP CITY co-curator Dean Haspiel and comedian/actress Katharine Heller launched what may be the first of several salon events featuring comics, comedy, prose, and musical performances entitled “NIGHT JOB”. Though it was a new venture, neither Haspiel nor Heller are strangers to the stage. They were joined by stand-up comedian and writer Molly Knefel of the internet radio show RADIO DISPATCH, indie cartoonist Meghan Turbitt, author Reverend Jen of the long-running “Rev Jen’s Anti-Slam” performance event. Also performing were political satirist and stand-up comedian Angry Bob, and the music group Two Beards One Heart, including Jeffrey Burandt (aka Jef UK of Americans UK), and Peter Boiko, supported by John Mathias and John Thomas Robinette III.
[Haspiel and Heller host the salon]
Though the salon opened to a full basement venue, audience members probably didn’t know quite what to expect from NIGHT JOB, however they might have known some of the performers by reputation. The term “salon” often implies multiple genres in the mix, and NIGHT JOB presented quite a range. Though each of these types of performance have the potential to be very entertaining on their own, it’s a challenge to combine them and create a sense of a cohesive event that, collectively, develops its own personality. NIGHT JOB found its way by emphasizing the raw power of very personal content from its salon members.
[Molly Knefel]
Knefel opened with a stand-up routine spoofing the “war on women” in congress last autumn, pointing out that a “war on anuses” would have had even the most conservative public official scrambling to sign up in protest. Her rapid-fire delivery and observational humor had the audience engaged from the outset, but her sense of personal commitment to the subject matter as a thinking person translating impressions of a bizarre world set the tone for the evening.
[Katharine Heller]
Heller read a selection from her recent project featuring “erotica” geared toward Republican sensibilities, “Tickle the Elephant”, and ingenious attempt to get inside the minds of what appeals to conservative women particularly. Turning the lingo of the senate floor and government catchphrases into turn-ons relentlessly, Heller narrated from the perspective of a conservative seduced by liberalism into a sexual common ground. Heller revealed a rather in-depth knowledge of politics on both sides of the party schism in her artistry, and in her mix of satire and humor, suggested dialogue is possible even in the most heated debates.
[A Turbitt comic panel]
Turbitt presented and performed a wide range of indie comix that appear online, increasingly irreverent to social taboos, particular in expressing women’s lives. From bathroom scenes of an intimate nature to things that most people find adorable but only annoy her, she pushed the envelope on expression and used the comic-panel reveal for shock-value. Her autobio approach struck many of the same chords as Knefel and Heller’s performances, bringing out the sense that discussing deeply personal subjects is still one of the most direct ways to reach an audience, who may be surprised to find out how much they have in common with the stories they hear and see.
[Meghan Turbitt]
Haspiel’s comix performance of “Awful George” from his series STREET CODE took the audience deep inside the strangeness, and the horror of urban stories, reflecting his own autobiographical reaction to witnessing a make-shift attempt to save a hoard of cats that had been wilfully neglected in an apartment, only to be topped by the discovery of a mummified corpse, begging the question, “How do you deal with these kind of realities?”
["Awful George" panel by Haspiel]
The answer from Haspiel is clearly “by expressing them and reaching out to readers”. His debut performance of a newly created Tommy Rocket comic, a spin-off from his BILLY DOGMA web comix, spoke to the twisted aspects of love, and the realities of failure and regret. Haspiel never pulls any punches in his comics, autobio or not, and these hammered home the role of authenticity in performance; getting up in front of a crowd to read your comics demands a kind of soul-baring stance that hits home for the audience.
[Dean Haspiel]
Reverend Jen took soul baring to a whole new level by reading from her unpublished novel, memoirs of her life as a prostitute attempting to support her artistic endeavors as a painter. She’s known for her extreme honesty during readings, and her narrative plumbed the depths of tragedy and suffering possible in what seems like an everyday world. Her description of images, as well as emotions, made for a stellar performance of prose. Rev Jen’s motivation in performing, to “get stuff out” of oneself actually also served the function of engaging the audience emotionally and reminding them, perhaps, of human resilience along the way.
[Rev Jen]
Angry Bob, true to his moniker, took on the role of voicing, like Knefel, Heller, and Turbitt, many of the things that people think, but don’t say out loud for fear of being ostracized as freakish. The truth, of course, is that they are not alone and everyone is wonder what’s considered “acceptable” to think or say in social settings. He described himself as someone “rooting through the garbage for shiny objects” like a racoon or other scavenger, and the objects he held up for inspection at NIGHT JOB were the ludicrous aspects of Reality TV, the curse of failed opportunities, and the general rage-inducing capabilities of young children, particularly in public. Angry Bob’s signature delivery, a high-octane rant that frequently addresses audience members directly, had their equally signature outcome: inspiring absolute hilarity at NIGHT JOB.
[Angry Bob]
The evening’s performances closed with the strikingly independent tones of Two Beards One Heart which also managed to match the ambiance of the previous salon members’ presentations. Not just in musical composition, whose sounds were so original as to suggest that the “personal” can be evoked as equally in sound as in words and images, but also in lyrics, Two Beards managed to create their own singular message.
[Two Beards One Heart]
Their first song illustrated rising angst through lyrics despite its melodic construction, while the second contrasted the poetic, upbeat aspects of love with bigger realities and banal conflicts. Burandt’s vocals, far from predictable, were particularly engaging, and contributed to a sense of individualistic expression of life’s perplexing highs and lows.
[Jeffrey Burandt]
One of the most winning aspects of NIGHT JOB, aside from his cohesion as a salon of the personal made public, was the fact that Haspiel asked, repeatedly, if anyone else would like to perform their work, friend or stranger alike. It suggested an open-door to artists of any genre who also had something to share. The tone of the evening, celebrating unique perspectives with communal implications, was as well suited to comics as music and comedy.
[Haspiel delivers an open invitation]
Setting comics alongside other genres in performance is not a new practice, but it’s becoming increasingly popular, perhaps because of the rise of self-publishing and internet sharing of creative work. As comics find their footing among other artistic modes, it’s appropriate to start asking what comics have in common with other formats of expression, and what makes them particularly powerful for self-expression. NIGHT JOB did an excellent job of illustrating the point. Performance art forms are about a meeting of minds between the performer and the audience, and many genres already push the boundaries of inter-personal communication, comics included.
Hannah Means-Shannon writes and blogs about comics for TRIP CITY and Sequart.org and is currently working on books about Neil Gaiman and Alan Moore for Sequart. She is @hannahmenzies on Twitter and hannahmenziesblog on WordPress.
Blog: Darcy Pattison's Revision Notes (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Pinterest, humor, facebook, comedy, write, odds, Add a tag
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Do you ever stop learning? I don’t. I may be able to teach a number of things and bring out the best in my students, but for myself, I keep learning.
Here are some things I’ve learned lately.
- Ban yellow highlighters! Highlighting is a poor learning strategy. Instead, stop ever so often and ask: Why is this true? How does this relate to things I already know? What do I still not know?
- I know way too little about writing comedy. But here are three great books on the topic that are making me work and work VERY HARD (Hurrah!):
- I run faster when my music has the right beat. Try the Cruise Control app: Cruise Control: Run – Cruise Control.
- Flourless Chocolate Cake tastes good and is a great Valentine recipe.
- Pinterest is becoming one of the major sources of traffic to my site. The visual medium of book covers and other related imagery piques people’s interest. Follow me on Pinterest.
- If your name is Pattison, your name might be confused with Pattinson these days. Miserable vampires.
- Life would be more interesting if YOU were part of the Fiction Notes Facebook group and if you asked and answered lots of questions there. Please come join us.
Blog: From the land of Empyrean (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: humor, comedy, audiobook, audible, audio, audio book, amish, cozy mystery, amish fiction, Helping Hands Press, Amish Outlaws, defective amish detective, Big Daddy Abel, Add a tag
Okay, maybe not me (that sounds needy), but I do have something for you to listen to.
I've been working on a new series called the Defective Amish Detective. It is a humorous, without making fun, look at the misadventures of an Amish blacksmith and his Non-Amish friend. The defective detective is admittedly a repentant man with a questionable past. He has reached an age where certain parts (eyes, ears) don't work as well as they did. Through travels with his wife into Amish Country, the detective has become friends with Eli, who also happens to have a shadow over his past. Together, they work to help those that cannot help themselves. Things don't always go as expected and both of their pasts may come back to haunt them. These stories are full of slapstick, but they also share a message and have heart.
Now, it is a special treat for me to share with you that my publisher, Helping Hands Press, has taken a big leap in putting Volume 1: The Whoopie Pie Affair on audiobook.
You can get more information on Amazon: http://amzn.to/13PgsSR
Another treat is the voice you will hear on the audiobook. It is none other than Big Daddy Abel. Also known as BDA, he is the frontman for a band called the Amish Outlaws and a talented author in his own right.
If you enjoy audiobooks, I do hope you will give mine a listen.
Thanks for reading and please visit me at www.FB.com/MarkMillerAuthor
Blog: Manga Maniac Cafe (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Manga, Comedy, Viz, Action-Adventure, Action/Adventure, Weekly Shonen Jump, Add a tag
Last week I was dealing with a house full of sick people (including me!) so I didn’t get a chance to read the January 14 issue of WSJA until today, so I’m just going to skip a recap of it and jump right into the January 21 issue. This is the first issue of the simulations release with the Japanese magazine, and the magazine has been renamed Weekly Shonen Jump. Good-bye Alpha and good-bye waiting for an English translation!
This week’s issue is 185 pages, and introduced One-Punch Man to the line-up. I have also discovered, much to my chagrin, that my by beloved Kenshin will only appear monthly as it is actually published in Jump Square. Boo hoo! But let’s put that disappointment behind us, and dive into this week’s issue of WSJ!
Naruto Chapter 616 – Nice color spread this issue and a congratulatory message from creator Masashi Kishimoto for going simultaneous! After getting a pep talk about not letting Neji’s death be in vain, Naruto gets a second wind (or probably 4th or 5th with as long as this battle has been going on). His chakra recharges and he quickly shares his renewed energy with the other ninja. Yay! We also get brave, determined declarations that he will never give up trying to save his comrades, and that despite loss and heartbreak, ninja will endure! Very motivating! These last two chapters have been my favorite since I have been reading the magazine, and the plot is starting to make more sense. All of these quick battle chapters can get confusing when you just get dumped into them, and they last for, what, over 2 months now?
One-Punch Man Chapter One – New series! Uhhhh. Short chapter. Saitama is a hero for fun, and he’s looking for an opponent who he can’t beat in one punch. Uhhh… Not sure about this one. I like the art, but I don’t like Saitama’s character design. He looks like a dork with an egg for a head. This chapter was so short that I don’t think it was a good intro to the series. Maybe next week’s chapter will knock my socks off?
One Piece Chapter 695 – Finally! Luffy and the gang has escaped from the lab! They are out in the fresh air and they won’t be victims of the poison gas! Buffalo and Baby 5 scoop up Caesar and try to make a break for it, but no-uh-uh! Usopp isn’t having any of that! This is a quick, fun chapter with lots of great art and great poses. I was getting bored of the lab drama, so I am looking forward to their next adventure!
Nisekoi Chapter 58 – Miyamoto has lost her glasses! Ichijo and Onodera help her look for them, and Ruri, frustrated that they like each other, but won’t confess their feelings, tries to get them together. Since Ichijo is so dense, her efforts don’t pay off. Not a very original chapter, but the expressive art and the clueless Ichijo made it a fun read.
Bleach Chapter 523 - Very cool color page get things kicked off. Ichigo and Renji get to play with Oh-Etsu Nimaiya, the creator of Zanpaku-to! More accurately, he gets to play with them. He throws them in the middle of a horde of angry Asauchi, which are the ultimate Zanpaku-tos that can become anything. They are pissed at how Ichigo and Renji have been using their Zanpaku-tos. Quick shift to Yachiru and Zaraki, who are facing off in the Soul Society’s underground prison. These guys are so serious! Someone is going to get hurt! And then – the chapter ends! This is a great setup for next week, and has me re-engaged in the story. I love Ichigo, but I am intrigued by Yachiru and want to see her and Zaraki cross swords. I am sure it will be an epic confrontation!
Cross Manage Chapter 17 – I love this one. The team is playing their first match, and after a motivating (more accurately, embarrassing) pep talk from Sakurai, the girls have been given the confidence to play all out! This is a feel good series, and I have enjoyed it every week. I keep gushing about it, but I love sports manga and wish there were more series available for me to read. When are we going to get more Crimson Hero?
Toriko Chapter 218 – Gourmet Corp is invading! Their giraffe birds and other weird creatures are out for blood! Starjun tries to make a grab for Komatsu, but Toriko is there to save him! While this hasn’t been my favorite manga, this week’s was pretty good, probably because I wasn’t inundated with a billion new chef’s and their specialties. The constant character intros has been driving me nuts! Wow, I might not cringe next week when I come to the next chapter.
Yu-Gi-Oh! Zexal Chapter 26 – I just don’t get this one. It is boring and I can’t force myself to get interested in the plot. I like the art and the character designs, but the story itself – yawn. I don’t get the rules of the game, and so I find myself just skimming this one every week.
And that’s it for this week! Next week there’s a one-shot by Akira Toriyama!
Add a CommentBlog: From the land of Empyrean (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: humor, satire, comedy, detective, amish, con artist, cozy mystery, amish fiction, Add a tag
You know, the small town in Amish Country, Lancaster PA?
What did you think I meant?
Blog: From the land of Empyrean (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: contest, humor, comedy, inspirational, free, funny, giveaway, Christian, free book, Christian fiction, free ebook, amish, cozy mystery, amish fiction, Mark Miller, Giovanni Gelati, Murray Pura, Add a tag
Recently, I started a new series with my friend, Giovanni. It was a relatively new experience diving into the world of Amish fiction. I did not quite know what to expect, but we ended up with something totally unique and outrageous.
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Nice review.
I think I’ll probably just stick with the anime and wait for a possible second season.
Did it even sell well enough to get a second season??? On another note, I need to check out the anime…
I don’t think that the anime sold that well. There’s an OVA on the way, but that doesn’t mean anything.
I have been reading D-Frag! since last year and it’s a really good comedy mangá. It’s one of my favorites. The art is going to improve, but it still isn’t what you would call “great”. But it’s not bad either.
If you liked the first volume, you’re going to like even more the following volumes (in my opinion). Especially the 6th volume, which contains the 39th chapter (for me the best chapter of the series).
Regarding the anime, I was disappointed with it. They left so many good chapters and jokes out, they did some unnecessary changes (like in the beginning), and the animation could have been better. I would recommend first to read the manga then watching.
Also, good review and sorry for my bad english.
…I don’t think your English was bad. W-why would you say that? Looks good to me.
Anyways, I…I guess I’ll have to go into the D-Frag! anime with tempered expectations then. I guess I’ll have to see.
Thank you for your reply.
Since english isn’t my native language, I’m afraid that I’m not writing properly. That’s a fear that I always have. I’m glad that you didn’t find any major mistake in my reply.
You probably will enjoy the anime more than I had, so don’t take my opinion too seriously. It’s not by any means an bad anime, not at all. But, as a fan(boy) of the manga, I think that anime could have been better if it wasn’t for some bad decisions from the director of the show. But, like I said before, it’s just my opinion.