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The Beat on Theory of Everything Comics: Presidential Trouble! Meltdown Gallery.

The Beat on Theory of Everything Comics: Presidential Trouble! Meltdown Gallery.

Elan’ Rodger Trinidad says:I just sold this piece at Meltdown Comics. As I’ve heard, a guy who works on Family Guy bought it. It was placed at this weird corner which was sort of hard to see. My friend who curated the gallery said that he put it there so that the laughter would echo in the room. I think that’s one of the reasons. But I think, partially, its because of the subject matter…” More after the link.  >> Theory of Everything Comics.

Posted under Art, Comedy Show, Commentary, Four toes, Images, Meltdown Gallery, Nightlife

This post was written by G D-L on March 10, 2009

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THE BEAT – Peter Kuper on MAD # 500

THE BEAT » Blog Archive » Peter Kuper on MAD.

Mad 500 72
Sometime MAD artist Peter Kuper sent us this sketch commemorating MAD’s move to quarterly as it approaches its 500th issue.

Posted under Art, Four toes, Leaked

This post was written by G D-L on February 4, 2009

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Meltdown on THE BEAT today!

Tom Spurgeon saves comics
By The Beat on Business News

The Comics Reporter has a list of “If I Were The Emperor of Comics: Two Dozen Things I’d Decree To Make Comics Better,” none of which we’d disagree with outright, few of which any responsible comics observer could disagree with, although some of the business suggestions would get a fight. As we head into the Cormac McCarthy model of a world economy, making cave drawings to amuse ourselves may be the only thing we have, so all this may be moot; however, we’d add another one:

#26: Make POS systems of some kind universal in comics shops.
I vividly remember walking into LA’s Meltdown Comics for the first time in many years or so and being amazed at its size and vibrancy, as owner Gaston Dominguez-Letelier ran us through the wide variety of items that sold well in his store. I asked about what he thought of using a point-of-sales system to track sales and he just smiled. “I’ve had POS for 10 years,” he said. Accurate sales information, via computerized inventory tracking, as Brian Hibbs has been telling us, is not only a way to save money but to gauge what readers like buying, not based on prior prejudices of the seller but actual sales numbers. Many retailers have told us that after installing POS systems, they made unexpected discoveries about what kinds of items had the highest turnover in the store. Hint: They were not published by Marvel and DC. Diamond’s POS has been slowly rolling out as it is tweaked, but there are already good systems available, such as MOBY, which Hibbs uses. While some people rail against the direct sales market as an outmoded superhero delivery system, as many people in the book industry would attest, having a dedicated nationwide base of thousands of specialty stores is something most publishers would kill for.

We’ll have more, maybe, after today’s deadline crunch, but in the meantime, read Tom’s piece and ponder.

Read the original at Publisher’s Weekly >>

Posted under News

This post was written by Caleb Monroe on October 6, 2008

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