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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: phoenix comicon, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 1 - 4 of 4
1. Phoneix Comicon draws 106,096 people…or 216,219, depending on how you’re counting.

Another weekend, another record setting comic con. In this case it was Conpalooza Weekend (June 3-5) which saw five major cons across the US alone. Phoenix Comicon, a fast rising “fourth biggest convention” may very well be the fourth biggest if these numbers are correct, as organizer Matt Solberg announced this year they had record […]

0 Comments on Phoneix Comicon draws 106,096 people…or 216,219, depending on how you’re counting. as of 6/15/2016 1:32:00 PM
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2. Alex de Campi donates book sales to spite “the Taxman”

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The Phoenix Comicon looked like a blockbuster success. The attendance figures are predicted to hit over 80,000 passes sold, but there were some issues the fans wouldn’t have noticed. The Arizona Department of Revenue were on site making sure all the exhibitors had acquired a Phoenix Privilege (Sales) Tax License before the con opened it’s doors. The Phoenix Comicon pro-actively sends emails with links and forms provided so this wouldn’t be an issue. Phoenix Comicon was notified a week before the event that state tax representatives were going to be present, according to the Manager of Comic Book Programing for Phoenix Comicon: Shawn Demumbrum.

Exhibitors and guests were forced to pay state and city taxes on all sales. Alex de Campi decided to take a loss and give all her books to the Hero Initiative.

“Downtown Phoenix, fairly quiet at night, is a really lovely place,” de Campi stated. “The convention is mostly well run. The Arizona cosplay teams are really active and creative. There was a team of guys and girls who did Mariachi Avengers. Mariachi Captain America was hot, he was like six-foot-four.” de Campi said. “There’s a real sense of fun and it’s a really good family convention.”

Obviously, de Campi can’t make the same money a cartoonist would at conventions, so she attempts to sell all of her books before she flies back to her home in Maryland. “This year I brought out 50 pounds of books and started to set up and I was told to go get my city sales license, and I just ignored it. That’s what I normally do,” de Campi said. The Phoenix tax rep questioned de Campi and advised her to acquire her licenses and pay taxes for every item sold. “I got a little bit grumpy because I thought that the least the convention can do is email us beforehand and warn us, or simply apart of the table fee.” Phoenix Comicon doesn’t collect the taxes, but management gives exhibitors all the information and applications for licenses.

The rebel rouser heard that the inspectors and enforcement were a last minute ordeal, so she stated she doesn’t blame the Con entirely. “I’m going to donate all my books to the Hero Initiative. Take that, tax man! So rather than making a little bit less money but still some money at the convention, I decided I’m not going to make any money on principle. Ladies and gentleman, I suck at Mercantile capitalism so badly!,” de Campi said.

Michael T. Malve, Hero Initiative representative at Phoenix Comicon, and former Atomic Comics store owner, said the money goes to helping some of the less fortunate, struggling work-for-hire comic book creators.  “We pick up Russ Heath, age 88, and take him out to lunch once a week. He tells us some stories, and (we) buy him $100 in groceries once a month,” Malve said. “We paid for some of Herb Trimpe‘s surgeries the last couple of years. When he passed away, his wife asked fans to make donations to the Hero Initiative because we were so helpful. We paid for Gene Coleman‘s first cataract surgery.”

“There’s nothing out there to help these comic book creators because they’re all ‘work for hire’. They were paid $8 a page to work in 1964 on Batman, and they might have created an iconic villain you see on shirts, but they didn’t get any (royalties),” Malve said. “We aren’t just looking out for the old creators, we’re also helping some of the younger artists.”

“The awesome thing is, I feel incredibly free. I’m actually able to see some of (the Con), wander around to buy t-shirts for my daughter,” de Campi said. “I feel great because I’ve done something for the Hero Initiative. I get to do extra signings at Dark Horse and talk to more fans. Everyone wins.”

De Campi is currently writing No Mercy for Image Comics and Dark Horses’ latest crossover Archie vs. Predator. Click here to check out de Campi’s comics and here to donate to the Hero Initiative.

12 Comments on Alex de Campi donates book sales to spite “the Taxman”, last added: 6/10/2015
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3. May Shows Recap

We started off May with one of our best shows, Texas Frightmare Weekend in Dallas, Fort Worth. One of my all time favorite Horror Conventions, Frightmare did not disappoint. Sales were a little down from last year, but still above average.

2 Weeks later, we were off on our 2 week long trip to the Midwest. Denver Comic Con and Phoenix Comicon. Driving through Utah to Colorado was beautiful trip. I love to show rather than tell, so here are a bunch of photos from the road:

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And our table and booth Setups at both shows:

denver_table phoenix_booth

 

At Phoenix Comicon I got to work on quite a bit of commissions. These were drawings of some of the TV actors that were guests at the show. Summer Glau as River Tam from Serenity, Lexa Doig from Andromeda , Alyson Hannigan as Willow from Buffy, Katee Sackhoff as Sarbuck from Battlestar Galectica, Charisma Carpenter as Cordelia Chase from Buffy and Danielle Panabaker as Caitlin Snow from The Flash:

Caitlin cordelia Lexa river_tam starbuck willow

The post May Shows Recap appeared first on Diana Levin Art.

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4. On the Scene: Phoenix Comicon as seen by a librarian and her 10-year-old daughter

201205311058 On the Scene: Phoenix Comicon as seen by a librarian and her 10 year old daughter

by Merideth Jenson-Benjamin

This Memorial Day weekend, downtown Phoenix was invaded by the nerdy, as the 10th Phoenix ComiCon was held. This con, which saw more than 30,000 people over four days, has grown exponentially over the last several years. It, like most “comic book” conventions, has become a celebration of all things geeky, and featured programming tracks for comics and superheroes, anime and manga, science fiction. It is the highlight of the year for many in the geek community in Arizona.

I had not attended Phoenix Comic Con for several years, and for the first time I attended with my daughter. Mari, age 10, is a veteran of San Diego Comic Con, but had never experienced a smaller, local convention. Although she’s been reading comics since she was old enough to know what a book is, she is just starting to explore the comics landscape on her own, getting a feel for the different types of comic art and stories. What follows is a conversation we had about our Phoenix Comicon experience.

Mom: So, Let’s talk about Phoenix Comic-Con. This was your first local con, and my first one in a long time. How did you feel about it?

Mari: It was fun! I had a really good time.

Mom: I thought it was fun too, but I had a few issues.

Mari: Me too.

Mom: What did you think was the best thing about the con?

Mari: The exhibit floor. Because there were a lot of vendors and artists that I had never seen before, and it wasn’t too expensive.

Mom: You bought a lot of art prints. Why did you choose to do that?

Mari: I want to be an artist, so I bought a lot of art that I liked and thought was interesting.

Mom: Did you have a favorite artist there?

Mari: I really liked Freddie Williams II and April Reyna. I bought prints from both of them. A Wonder Woman and a Harley Quinn. They were both really nice and talked to me for a while.

Mom: I liked Artist Alley too. I had really nice conversations with Stuart and Kathryn Immonen, and with Randy Millholland from Something Positive.

Mari: When can I read Something Positive?

Mom: When you’re in high school.

Mari: You said the same thing about Sin City!

Mom: Exactly. Did anything bother you about the exhibit floor?

Mari: There were a lot of erotic pictures and artists. It bothers me that artists draw girls, even the heroes, as such hootchies. I mean what they do is none of my business but, there were lots of little kids there. And the Events guide had Lady Death on the front of it, and s

14 Comments on On the Scene: Phoenix Comicon as seen by a librarian and her 10-year-old daughter, last added: 6/2/2012
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