WELCOME TO REC.ARTS.COMICS (part 1 of 7: introduction) written by lots of different people edited by Paul A. Estin 1990-1993 Tom Galloway 1993-present [last update: 11/03/93] Welcome to the rec.arts.comics hierarchy, or as we tend to call it, rac. If you're new to Usenet, you probably aren't aware of the many customs that the net and the rec.arts.comics.* hierarchy have developed over many years. However you should be, so you won't inadvertantly break them. Breaking these customs won't cost you anything but the most important thing you've got on the net: your credibility. It's assumed that you're reading and posting to newsgroups to communicate with other people, and violating these customs will tend to make most people take your posts less seriously, or even start to ignore them all together. Which isn't much help in your attempts to communicate with others. This monthly posting, provided to help out new readers of the rec.arts.comics newsgroups, contains the following parts: 1. where to read/post: the rec.arts.comics hierarchy and related newsgroups 2. glossary of some common terms 3. the "FAQ": answers to frequently-asked questions 4. guidelines for posting articles 5. ftp addresses to ask for various types of comics-related files 6. e-mail addresses to ask for various types of comics-related files 7. e-mail addresses of comics-related mailing lists. Before getting specific about rec.arts.comics, if you are a newcomer to Usenet you should go read six posts which are generally found in the newsgroup news.announce.newusers. These have the Subject:s of: Emily Postnews Answers Your Questions on Netiquette Rules for posting to Usenet A Primer on How to Work With the Usenet Community Answers to Frequently Asked Questions about Usenet Hints on writing style for Usenet What is Usenet? If not in n.a.n., these are available via FTP from rtfm.mit.edu. See part 5 for specific commands to access them, both by FTP and by email. You should also be reading the newsgroup news.newusers.questions. Feel free to e-mail me at tyg@netcom.com if you have any suggestions as to what should be included in this "Welcome to Rec.arts.comics" post. 1. the rec.arts.comics hierarchy and related newsgroups The r.a.c set of newsgroups, in general, is devoted to the discussion of comic books, graphic novels, and sequential art. Until summer 1992, comics discussion took place in the group rec.arts.comics. This group was removed and should not be posted to. r.a.c. was replaced by the following more specific groups: rec.arts.comics.info: A moderated group, r.a.c.i. is intended for factual and informational postings and reasonably detailed reviews (i.e. a review consisting entirely of "I really liked/hated Suicide Squid #666" isn't going to cut it). Relatively low volume, the idea is to have a very high signal to noise ratio in its postings. Posting to this group will result in your post being emailed to the moderator, who'll decide whether to post it to the group at large. In general, turnaround time is within 24 hours, and the moderator announces on the group if he'll not be posting for any longer period. Followup discussion of posts here take place in the appropriate r.a.c. group. The moderator is Brian Hughes, whose mail address is hades@coos.dartmouth.edu rec.arts.comics.strips: For the discussion of comic strips and editorial cartoons, their creators, and any spinoffs such as tv, movies, collections, or merchandise. rec.arts.comics.xbooks: For discussion of Marvel mutant books (defined as X-Men, Uncanny X-Men, X-Force, X-Factor, Excalibur, Wolverine, X-Men 2099, Generation X, and any mini-series or stories in anthology titles about characters from those books). Note that xbooks has its own FAQ. rec.arts.comics.marketplace: For the posting of For Sale and Wanted posts dealing with any aspect of comics or related merchandise. Note that marketplace has its own FAQ. rec.arts.comics.misc: If it's about comics and doesn't fit in the above groups, this is where to post it. In general, there should be almost no crossposting between the above groups. r.a.c. has taken the approach of developing a hierarchy based on carving off well defined subtopics with their own semi-defined readerships from the overall topic. In particular, all "for sale" posts should go in rec.arts.comics.marketplace, and crossposting them elsewhere is *highly* discouraged. (A number of r.a.c.ers have stated that they will ignore For Sale posts made in other groups, and it'll undoubtedly result in your getting some flaming email.) One other special note: material solely about xbooks should be posted into r.a.c.xbooks and should not be crossposted into r.a.c.misc. See part 3 for suggested criteria for future r.a.c.* groups. Note that posts which have nothing to do with comics, such as non-comics-related Star Trek, political/religious rants or personal attacks, have no place in r.a.c.. In particular, regarding the Usenet Floating Homosexuality Flamewar, it is appropriate for the appearance of gays in comics to be discussed, but rants either against or in favor of homosexuality in the general sense are not appropriate. There are several groups which are tangentially related to comics, and which may be more appropriate for a particular post. It *may* be appropriate, in limited contexts, to cross-post between one of these groups and one of the rec.arts.comics groups, but be *very* careful that your post is actually relevant to both groups! rec.arts.manga: Though not technically part of the rec.arts.comics hierarchy (there was already one religious war on the subject; let's not repeat it), this newsgroup is devoted to the discussion of Japanese manga. rec.arts.animation: a newsgroup devoted to the discussion of animated films, TV shows, shorts, etc. There are also innumerable related newsgroups to this, such as rec.arts.disney and alt.tv.tiny-toons, but in particular there is: rec.arts.anime: for discussion of Japanese animation. Finally, there are various "alt" groups which are not affiliated with Usenet and are usually received at fewer sites than r.a.c groups. User discretion is advised. alt.comics.lnh The Legion of Net.Heroes, a r.a.c spinoff of fan fiction alt.comics.superman use r.a.c.misc instead, for more dependable distribution; at the very least, crosspost alt.comics.batman use r.a.c.misc instead, for more dependable distribution; at the very least, crosspost alt.comics.elfquest use r.a.c.misc instead, for more dependable distribution; at the very least, crosspost alt.fan.albedo a furry comic alt.fan.bugtown Matt Howarth comics, such as _Those Annoying Post Brothers_ and _Savage Henry_. alt.fan.furry all furry comics + animation alt.fan.suicide-squid a net.character, see part 3 for details alt.fan.tank-girl the comic book "Tank Girl" [end of part 1: introduction] "There are no net.gods, just some people with bigger mouths than others." --Dan'l DanehyOakes, net.roach tyg tyg@netcom.com ****************************************************************************** ÿ@SUBJECT:Welcome to rec.arts.comics 2: Glossary Message-ID: Newsgroup: rec.arts.comics.info,rec.answers,news.answers Organization: Interleaf, Inc. WELCOME TO REC.ARTS.COMICS (part 2 of 7: the r.a.c. glossary) written by lots of different people edited by Paul A. Estin 1990-1993 Tom Galloway 1993-present [last update: 11/03/93] 2. The USENET/ Rec.arts.comics lingo glossary: General Usenet terms: bandwidth = analogous to a radio bandwidth (frequency), referring to the resources needed to propagate posts. Usually used in the phrase "stop wasting bandwidth", which means simply "don't post if you don't have anything relevant to say." btw = by the way FAQ = Frequently Asked Questions; topics which have come up repeatedly with answers to try to avoid having them come up again. See part 3. flame = an inflammatory, insulting post flame war = a flame response to a flame responding to a flame... FYI = for your information IMHO = in my humble (or honest) opinion IMPO = in my personal (or pompous) opinion kill file = a file usable in the "rn" and "nn" news programs that one can keep to "filter out" disliked topics, keywords, or posters newbie = [General] anyone new to Usenet or a particular newsgroup. [Specific] anyone who makes a netiquette mistake showing that they've not bothered to learn the customs of either Usenet or the newsgroup they're posting to. signal-to-noise ratio = in a newsgroup, the proportion of useful articles to useless ones (such as flames). We like to keep the signal relatively high and the noise very low. SOL = shit out of luck wrt = with respect to :-) = a "smiley", used to indicate humor or sarcasm Specific R.a.c terms: Alternative Squiddy = The sillier and more net oriented annual r.a.c. awards. See "Squiddy" for more detail. ashcan = a half-sized (4" x 5"), typically black and white, promotional copy of a comic book. Originally, ashcans were produced to claim trademarks. Today, ashcans are produced more as a promotion than to gain guardianship of intellectual property. CBG = Comic Buyers' Guide, a weekly newspaper comix = independent, non-mainstream comics, such as _Yummy Fur_ or _Desert Peach_. Crisis = the Crisis on Infinite Earths (usually). (See the "Frequently- Asked Questions" section below.) CSN = Comic Shop News, a free weekly hype sheet dangling plotline/dangler = an unresolved plotline or mystery which an author has apparently forgotten about, since it hasn't been mentioned in a long time. fanboy/fangirl = a rabidly devoted fan, often said to be "drooling". This can be used in a general sense, or a specific sense, such as X-Men fanboy, Sandgirl, Image fanboy, etc. "the fourth wall" = originally used with reference to stage sets, this term refers to the imaginary wall between the characters and the audience. "Breaking the fourth wall" refers to comics in which the characters are aware that they exist in a comic book, sometimes for the purpose of humor. furry = an anthropomorphic animal, such as Mickey Mouse, Cerebus, or Omaha JLA, JLE, JLI, JLUTB = the popular DC super-hero groups "Justice League America", "Justice League Europe", "Justice League International", and for those tired of them, the hypothetical "Justice League Up-the-Butt" LNH = Legion of Net Heroes, a parody of sorts of... LSH = Legion of Super-heroes (a DC comic book) OHOTMUDE = Official Handbook of the Marvel Universe, Deluxe Edition PAD = Peter A. David, a comics writer known to read r.a.c patch = (see retcon) pod person (or just 'pod') = a character who has been taken over by a new writer and/or editor and immediately acts very inconsistently with previous characterization, with no explanation given for the change, and no change noticed by other characters in the book. The term is from the movie Invasion of the Body Snatchers, where aliens grew duplicates of people in giant pods. First use of 'pod' was in reference to the changeover after Keith Giffen left the JLI titles, concerning the characters Fire, Ice, Max, and Oberon. pogs or "milk caps." = Round, approximately 2.5 inches in diameter, and cardboard, pogs are the element of a game from Hawaii. While the game involves stacking the pogs and flipping another to knock them over, on the continent in recent months, they have simply become another alternative to trading cards, bearing art and/or text concerning super-heroes. Many here consider pogs on the mainland an example of a manufacture fad. post-Crisis = events/history/characters in the DC Universe as they existed *after* the Crisis on Infinite Earths. (See the "Frequently-Asked Questions" section in part 3.) pre-Crisis = events/history/characters in the DC Universe as they existed *prior* to the Crisis on Infinite Earths. (See the "Frequently- Asked Questions" section in part 3.) retcon = to retroactively change the continuity of a character or title. (This term, a r.a.c favorite, was coined by Damian Cugley). Originally, the term "retcon" was used only in cases where the interpretation of "facts" from earlier stories is changed, but the facts themselves are preserved. For example, Alan Moore took took the character Swamp Thing, previously considered to be a man transformed into a plant creature, and with minimal changes to facts presented in previous stories, wrote Swamp Thing to be a "plant elemental", one of a long line of such beings. A "patch" was the term used (taken from programmer's jargon) to mean an actual change, rather than merely filling in details. These days, however, "retcon" is used increasingly to mean changes to history as well as to retroactive continuity. So, to "retcon" is to change history, so that something that had existed in the continuity of the fictional universe, not ONLY doesn't exist now, but in the fictional history, NEVER HAS existed. This can be true of an event, of a character, or whatever. For example, if Hawkman appears in the Justice League, and then years later a writer decides that "No, Hawkman just came to Earth, he was *never* in the Justice League," that's a retcon. Retcon is also listed in the New Hacker's Dictionary, with credit given to r.a.c.. In the second edition, this is disputed. In the third edition, should there be one, there will likely be a dispute of the dispute... spoiler = any item which "gives away" information about a comic. Proper netiquette is to give a "Spolier Warning" first, to allow people to avoid the spoiler if they wish to not have their surprise ruined. Squiddy = what some people call the annual r.a.c. Awards. See section 3 for why this is the case. These are the more formal and serious categories. Suicide Squid = See the FAQ in part 3. TMNT = Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles [end of part 2] "There are no net.gods, just some people with bigger mouths than others." -- Dan'l DanehyOakes, net.roach tyg tyg@hq.ileaf.com ****************************************************************************** ÿ@SUBJECT:Welcome to rec.arts.comics 3: Frequently Asked Questions Message-ID: Newsgroup: rec.arts.comics.info,news.answers,rec.answers Organization: Interleaf, Inc. WELCOME TO REC.ARTS.COMICS (part 3 of 7: the r.a.c FAQ) written by lots of different people edited by Paul A. Estin 1990-1993 Tom Galloway 1993-present [last update: 11/03/93] 3. Frequently-Asked Questions (The rac FAQ) * Why not split off a new group for Marvel/Sandman/comix/etc? This is a highly flammable topic of debate. Several dozen splits have been suggested over the past few years. Only two (rac.strips, and the rac re-org) succeeded. Many readers would still prefer going back to a single r.a.c with no subgroups. Here is an incomplete list of previously rejected ideas: rac.superhero battlin' guys wearing tights. Failed in the 1992 vote. rac.marvel/dc company-based splits have failed several previous votes. rac.vertigo/image both suggested in late 1992, told to wait a while. rac.indie basically a company-based split. rac.alternative rejected due to ambiguity of "alternative". rac.mature implies other comics are immature. ambiguous. rac.adult implies sexually-explicit material. ambiguous. rac.creative failed by four votes in October '93. Likely to be reproposed around April '94. Splits are not impossible, though-- the r.a.c hierarchy *was* created. But any further split would have to be very well justified. Attempt them at your own risk (buy lots of asbestos). Some things to consider: - Is the split easily and clearly defined, and separable from other traffic? - Will a fair number of people *not* want to read the new group? - Is current group traffic too high? Will the split reduce it? - Will the topic die off in a few years, leaving us a redundant group? - Can you convince thousands of people you are not a raving loon? * What is Zero Hour? From various reliable sources, the following seems pretty definite. Zero Hour is a major DC crossover series which will happen in summer '94. There are reports it will be "self-contained" by which people have guessed that it will feature many different DC characters in the mini-series, but will not have explicit crossovers into existing DC titles. It definitely involves time travel, and will be written and drawn by Dan Jurgens. The Legion of Super-Heroes, Legionnaires, and L.E.G.I.O.N. characters will definitely play a major role, as will Team Titans. Team Titans and Valor are already supposed to be leading up to the series. There are reports that Wonder Woman and Hawkman will also be involved, but this is less certain. Also, there are reports that we'll find out who Superboy was cloned from. Once again, this is less certain. Zero Hour is intended to clean up DC continuity problems, particularly those resulting from either time travel or the phasing in of Crisis results (see below for a summary of those). Fairly reliable are reports that it will be a five issue mini-series with issues coming out in the following order: 4, 3, 2, 1, and finally 0. * What's this about Sandman ending? Neil Gaiman has announced that Sandman will relatively soon end as a regular, monthly, series. The next major storyline will be titled The Kindly Ones. This will be followed by a short storyline titled The Wake, and several one issue stories. The final issue will be The Tempest, drawn by Charles Vess. He's announced his intent to continue to do specials and mini-series about the Endless and their supporting cast, but not as a continuing, regular, series. * Who's this Cerebus character people post a lot about? Cerebus, written and produced by Dave Sim, is longest running and generally best selling black & white comic on the market. Cerebus, the main character, is a 3 foot tall aardvark who has been, among other things, a barbarian, prime minister, pope, and outlaw. The series is expected to run exactly 300 issues, ending in March 2004 (I'm not making this up) with the death of Cerebus. * What was the Crisis on Infinite Earths? The _Crisis on Infinite Earths_ was a 12-issue series published by DC in 1985-6. The "Crisis" effectively revamped the entire DC Universe by merging several universes (containing the various DC characters) into a single universe (whose history is still somewhat unclear in parts). The Crisis was used as an opportunity to change DC history retroactively (see "retcon" in the list of definitions), including the remaking of several main DC characters. Thus people refer to the "post-Crisis" Superman, Wonder Woman, etc., as distinct from the "pre-Crisis" versions who existed on "Earth-1" or "Earth-2". The confusion *really* begins because the revamping and "retconning" didn't all take place in the Crisis limited series itself, nor in the comics immediately after then. If DC had simply started all their series over from scratch, thing would have been pretty straightforward. Instead, they declared the Pre-Crisis history to be implicitly intact, until and unless they could explicitly create the new, post-Crisis versions of characters and histories. Thus, new changes are still being made in titles today, more than half a decade later. So, for example, the "old" Hawkman appeared in the "new" Justice League. But then Timothy Truman began writing _Hawkworld_, which retconned Hawkman's character; among other changes, Hawkman "now" arrived on Earth much later. *So*, the Hawkman who appeared in the new Justice League comic (call him the Silver Age Hawkman, or the pre-Crisis Hawkman) "now" (in real world time) "no longer exists, and never has" (within current DC continuity). But then the creators realized the problem, so they said that most of the Silver Age Hawkman appearances in JLA were actually by the Golden Age Hawkman, and a new Hawkman was created whose purpose was to satisfy those few JLA appearances made after the GA Hawkman was known to have been MIA. Confused yet? Suffice it to say, the way DC handled the Crisis and its aftermath confuses *lots* of readers and provides a perennial topic of discussion on r.a.c.misc There has been the occasional announcement that Crisis would be reprinted as a trade paperback, but the latest word from DC is that they feel it would be too expensive and don't plan to do so. * Where can I find "Man of Steel, Women of Kleenex"? In the late 1960s, Larry Niven wrote a hysterically funny essay in which he speculated about possible problems that the pre-Crisis Superman would have in attempting to reproduce or just have sex with a Terran. The essay appears in Niven's collections _All the Myriad Ways_ and _N-Space_, and in the anthology _Alien Sex_. And yes, we know that Niven didn't take the bottle city of Kandor into account. * What are the different types of Kryptonite? Post-Crisis there have been only three main types, of which only one has made more than one appearance. This, usually refered to just as "kryptonite", is green and has similar effects on Kryptonians as pre-Crisis Green K. While it has no immediate effect on Terrans or other races, prolonged exposure has resulted in cancer due to radiation. Mr. Mxyzptlk created a chunk of Red Kryptonite, which effectively removed Superman's powers for a time. In the Pocket Universe storyline, Superman encountered what amounted to a rainbow of types of pre-Crisis Kryptonite. He was not affected by any of it, although PU Kryptonians were. Pre-Crisis, there were numerous types. These were: Green Kryptonite: weakens and eventually kills super-powered Kryptonians. Usually harmless to other races, but one story in Brave and the Bold had a device used which resulted in Terrans being affected similar to Kryptonians. Anti-Kryptonite: similar to Green K, but affects non-super-powered Kryptonians. This was a retcon used to explain why the non-powered Argo City residents could be killed by what seemed to be Green K. X-Kryptonite: Only one chunk, it was created by Supergirl trying to find a cure for Green K. It gives Terrans, or at least Terran cats, Kryptonian style powers for a limited time. Red Kryptonite: Causes a specific, odd, effect. Often involved physical transformations or mental changes. Each chunk had a different effect, and could only affect a given Kryptonian once. Effects usually wore off in 24-48 hours. Created when Green K passed through a space cloud. Gold Kryptonite: Removes a Kryptonian's super-powers permanently. Created when Green K passed through a different space cloud. White Kryptonite: Kills any plant life from any world. Yep, another space cloud. Blue Kryptonite: Has the same effect on Bizarro Kryptonians as Green K does on real Kryptonians. Created by the same imperfect duplicator ray that created the Bizarros. Jewel Kryptonite: Remnents of Krypton's Jewel Mountains, it allows Phantom Zone residents to focus their mental energy and cause explosions in the outside world. Two notable fake varieties are Silver and Yellow K. Silver was used to keep Superman from closely investigating what turned out to be a 25th (silver) anniversary gift for him from his friends, and Yellow was used by Luthor to fake out what he thought was Superman. It turned out it was a Superman robot ordered to react to Kryptonite like the real thing. When Luthor found this out, he returned all the gold from Fort Knox which he'd stolen. * How do you spell/pronounce the last name of artist Bill Sienkiewicz? It's spelled as above, and pronounced "sin-KEV-itch". * Isn't there a gay Marvel mutant? Yes. This is Northstar (Jean-Paul Beaubier) from _Alpha Flight_. When John Byrne began the series (issues #1-26), he made the point that Jean-Paul was gay, using tiny hints that are obvious if you're looking for them. In issue #7, Northstar visits Raymonde Belmonde, presumably a former lover. In #8, Aurora apparently knows (and disapproves) of his sexual orientation. In #11's back-up story, James Hudson comments that Northstar didn't seem too interested in women. There were other tiny hints as well-- nothing that really made sense unless you knew what to look for. The hints were subtle enough that you might not get the idea independently. But if you read the stories with the possibility in mind, it was quite clear. Later in the series, there were strong hints that Jean-Paul had contracted AIDS. Unfortunately, the Editor-in-Chief of Marvel, (there is debate on which one; Jim Shooter or Tom DeFalco), declared "There are no homosexuals in the Marvel Universe," and decided to "fix things." After Byrne, Bill Mantlo was writing Alpha Flight, and he retconned both Northstar and Aurora into being half-human and half-elf (thus their pointed ears), and decided that Northstar's sickness was due to being outside of the realm of faerie. Note that nothing in the faerie storyline indicated that Jean-Paul was *not* gay, just that he didn't have AIDS. Also, Mantlo should be given *some* credit. He dropped several "hints" as well, including issues #28 and #45 or 46. Unlike Byrne's, these had the subtlety of a sledgehammer. The "faerie" change was later de-retconned, though I am unfamiliar with the details. In any case, much later, in issue #106, Northstar held a press conference is which he came out of the closet (He does *not* have AIDS). A Marvel editor explained that (paraphrasing), "Many of our readers suspected the truth all along, but now we decided to make the issue clear." Yeah, right. * What are some of the gay characters in comics? A short list for DC includes Mindy Meyer's brother (Wonder Woman), Maggie Sawyer and Toby Gaines (Superman), Extrano (New Guardians), Ray Monde (Hellblazer), Pied Piper (Flash), perhaps Lightning Lass and Shrinking Violet (Legion of Superheroes). It has also been suggested that the Amazons in WW are gay to some extent. Marvel has Northstar, perhaps Mystique and Destiny. Mystique has been revealed to have mothered one child, and it's strongly implied that she had sex with Wolverine in Wolverine #51, so if she is gay, she's bi-. Note that according to Chris Claremont, his planned origin for Nightcrawler had Mystique, a shape-changer, being Kurt's father and Destiny being the mother. At the time, Mystique was in male form and sufficiently traumatized from war incidents to not realize her true gender or past. Others include the women warriors in Epic's _Sisterhood of Steel_, Barney (The Masked Man), the woman from _Detectives, Inc._, Robbie and Frank from _Omaha_, and Terry, Pam, and George from _Zot!_. Several characters are either gay or bi in _Love and Rockets_. _Desert Peach_ has a gay main character, Erwin Rommel's (fictitious) younger brother. Many of the above are gays-written-by-straights and are of questionable merit. Others have been said by gays to have been handled quite well. * How old is Kitty Pryde (of Excalibur)? The short answer: Kitty was 13 1/2 when she joined the X-Men. She had her 15th birthday in Excalibur #24. Soren F. Peterson reports that Claremont spoke at a con the weekend of July 27-28, 1991 and stated without a shadow of a doubt that Kitty Pryde is only 15. Now, there's no *way* that only 18 months passed in the interim; too many events have occurred. But forget trying to make sense of it. If Chris Claremont can't keep track of Kitty's age, why should you? Until the writers retcon it, 15 it is. However, as of October, 1993, an issue of Excalibur had Kitty saying: "Unh-uh, Professor...we've *had* this conversation once too often, when I was still a *minor* [her emphasis], living at the mansion. The whole stern-but-benevolent patriarch riff isn't going to *work* anymore. You have a *case* to make -- make it as an *adult, one-on-one*." So she may be 18 now, but it's not completely sure. Particularly since an issue of X-Men appearing at about the same time stated that only a year had passed since events which took place before Kitty's 15th birthday party. * Where are the "real" locations of Metropolis, Gotham City, Hub City, etc., in the DC Universe? Metropolis and Gotham City have been equated to *many* different real-world cities over the years; there is no one correct answer. (Even if there were, the current writers are under no duress to use it.) Hub City, from _The Question_, is a bit different; it is based on a combination of two cities in Illinois, one of which is definitely East St. Louis. Writer Denny O'Neil admitted this at one point, but no longer does so in order not to offend residents of the cities. Metropolis, as originally developed by Siegel and Shuster, was probably Cleveland, the "big city" with which they were most familiar. There are also possible early references to Toronto. Later, Superman's home was moved to somewhere in the BosWash corridor on the U.S. East Coast. _Who's Who in the Legion of Superheroes_ showed a 30th century Metropolis, which stretched slightly beyond New York and Boston in either direction, and used those names explicitly in the description of Metropolis. John Byrne seemed to think it was back in the midwest. Gotham is a traditional nickname for New York City, but there is a separate NYC in the DC universe. It is definitely a port city, probably on the east coast; too much plot has depended on that fact. Again, various sources have placed Gotham City all along the east coast, often near Metropolis. The distance to Metropolis has also varied; from hundreds of miles to linked by a bridge. Frank Miller once claimed that, metaphorically, "Metropolis is New York in the daytime, while Gotham is New York at night." Works for me. Mayfair Games published an Atlas of the DC Universe, written by DC staffer Paul Kupperberg. While not completely official, it does jibe with locations that DC used when its house fanzine of the mid-70s discussed this same question. The locations given for the main DC fictional cities are: Metropolis: Delaware Gotham City: New Jersey Star City: far nothern California Coast City: on 101 near Sausalito between San Francisco and Oakland [Now destroyed, but based on maps shown in the Superman titles, seemingly moved to midway between LA and SF.] Middleton (where J'onn J'Onzz first operated): suburb of Denver Littleville (Robby Reed): Wyoming Blue Valley (Kid Flash): northwest Nebraska, near South Dakota Central City/Keystone City: a bit north of Kansas City, Central is in Missouri while Keystone is in Kansas on the other side of the Mississippi Calvin City/Ivy Town (Atoms): both in Connecticut near New Haven Dos Rios (El Diablo): 65 miles south of San Antonio Fairfax (2nd Dial H for Hero): suburb of Bangor, Maine Midway City (Doom Patrol, Hawkman): Michigan, just east of Sault Ste. Marie Smallville: Kansas, 50 miles west of the I-70/I-35 interchange on I-70. The population is given as 90,000 btw. Many people have noted errors in the geographical plausibility of the above entries. For example, the state borders near the Mississippi and Missouri Rivers are obviously different in the DC Universe than in our world, and Coast City can only be "between San Franciso and Oakland" if one intends to drive from one city to the other without bothering to use the bridge that directly connects the two. These are from the Mayfair Games book, which was obviously not edited as scrupulously as the r.a.c Welcome posting. :-) One final note: There's a real small town in southern Illinois named Metropolis, located about twenty miles north of where the Mississippi and Ohio Rivers meet. On their "Welcome to Metropolis" sign they do claim "Home of Superman", have a Superman statue on display, and every year they have a Superman festival. At least at one time, the local paper was called the Daily Planet. * Who is Suicide Squid? Short answer: Suicide Squid is the de facto r.a.c. mascot. Squiddy was accidently created in April, 1991 when a netter wanted to ask the question "Can someone tell me what's going on in Suicide Squad?" and typed an "i" for the "a" in Squad. Many netters responded with what had been going on in the Suicide Squid comic, which was a pretty good trick since it didn't really exist. People then tried to reconcile the different versions of the comic, and it mushroomed from there. Suicide Squid is now used in r.a.c. posts for a generic comic book title when one is needed, or as a way of commenting satirically on various events in comics. The current writer/artist of the book is usually said to be Alonzo Mori, and the SS fan club is the Black Ink Irregulars. The annual r.a.c. Awards are often refered to as the Squiddies, and the r.a.c. team in the last two San Diego Comicon trivia contests has gone by the name of the Black Ink Irregulars (and won both years). A copy of the Squid relevant parts of just about every post mentioning Squiddy since his creation is kept at theory.lcs.mit.edu in the FTPable file pub/wald/suicide-squid. As you might expect, it's quite large but fun to read. There are Suicide Squid t-shirts, and wearing them is a good way to be recognized by other r.a.c.ers at cons, signings, and other events. * How can I get a Suicide Squid t-shirt? There have been three runs of these shirts, sold only to r.a.c.ers and a few comics professionals. The art was done by pro artist Ty Templeton, and the shirts have appeared on an episode of Parker Lewis Can't Lose (then on Fox, now being rerun on USA Cable in the U.S.) and on Prisoners of Gravity, an Ontario public TV show about science fiction and comics which is also shown on some PBS stations in the U.S.. A Squid shirt will appear regularly on the '93-4 season of Prisoners of Gravity. The third run is currently being sold. Send email to tyg@hq.ileaf.com for a copy of the ordering information or to be put on a mailing list for a fourth run should the third run be sold out (fourth run probably won't happen until Fall '94) * What is "The Cowboy Wally Show"? TCWS is a graphic novel written and drawn by Kyle Baker around 1988. It was done for Doubleday, not a regular comics publisher, and thus showed up in bookstores rather than comics stores. In a strip in Spy Magazine in 1993, Baker comments that more copies were returned than were published; it's hard to tell how much he was exaggerating. At any rate, this book is now out of print and very hard to find. To give you an idea, Jim Cowling bought a copy via an ad on the net for $100. As for why it's in such demand, Jim later stated it was worth every penny to him. It's a very funny book, and has contributed numerous .sig quotes to those of us who have a copy. It's become something of an icon on r.a.c.m., and in the 1993 Alternative Squiddies, one category (inspired by a thread the previous year on r.a.c.m.) was "Body Part You'd Give Up For A Copy Of The Cowboy Wally Show". * Is that really Peter David who posts here? Yes, the Peter A. David aka PAD who posts here is in fact the Peter David who writes Hulk, Soulsearchers & Co., Aquaman, Spider-Man 2099, etc. Want proof? Take a look at this passage from one of his Psi-Man novels, written under the pen name of David Peters: "Chuck was impressed to see the latest hardware rolling his way--the computer aided RAC 3000, Ultraflame Model.....'What does RAC stand for?' he asked." "Really Awesome Car." "'Oh.' He shrugged. Obviously a name developed by people in marketing." Not to mention individual netters who have shown up as characters in his comics and novel work (Star Trek #4 in the current DC run includes the FAQ maintainer as an Admiral in charge of Starbase 24, for example) Please note the following etiquette which has developed around posting to Peter; he tends to read posts which have PAD in the Subject: line, and it's perfectly acceptable to ask him questions, say something like: Subject: PAD: When will Aquaman encounter Suicide Squid? Keep in mind he's under no obligation to either read or answer such though. Also, it's considered bad form to ask him either something which is either not of general interest to r.a.c., or specifically ask him about topics which he has no more personal knowledge of than any other r.a.c.er. For example, specifically asking Peter about, oh, something in the Superman books, makes no sense since he has nothing to do with them. * Is that really Art Adams, Kevin Maguire, and Michael Collins who post here? Yes, it really is Art Adams, Kevin Maguire, and Michael Collins who post here. It's just that the people with those names who post here aren't the comics artists with those names. This has led to an informal r.a.c. rule of thumb; if you see a post from someone with the same name as a comics writer, it probably is the writer. If you see a post from someone with the same name as a comics artist, it's probably not the artist. And ruining a perfectly good heuristic, Wayne Wong announced in late October '93 that he'll be drawing Space Police, due out next year from Sky Comics. And just after that, Steven Lieber, who'll be drawing Hawkman with #9, came on the net. * Are there any other pros on the net? There are a few at the creative level, but Peter is the only "big name" who posts with any regularity. Posts have been seen from Diane Duane, Henry Vogel, Jeff Lang, and Neil Gaiman frequently is forwarded posts about his work, although he's not directly on the net. A fair number of pros are on the COMICS-L via email connections from Compuserve. Malibu editor Roland Mann used to post frequently until he moved and lost his net connection. There are probably others I've overlooked. A special case is Matthew High, who works for Antarctic Press in a non-creative capacity and regularly posts information about what the company is up to. The rest of this FAQ deals with IRC and comics related channels. It was written by Russell Allbery, rra@leland.Stanford.EDU What is IRC? IRC stands for Internet Relay Chat. It allows large numbers of users to talk to each other in real time, much like the Unix talk command or the VMS phone command. IRC consists of a large number of channels, and users can join the channel (or channels) that they are interested in and talk to other people on that channel. Many of the readers of rec.arts.comics hang out in the channel #comics. How do I get on IRC? The best way to get on IRC is to get a program called an IRC client, which will handle all of the details of connecting you to an IRC server. Check with other people at your site to see if anyone else already has an IRC client, or obtain the source code via anonymous ftp from cs.bu.edu in the directory /irc/clients. You can also use the telnet server by typing "telnet tiger.itc.univie.ac.at 6668" at the command prompt; however, please do not use the telnet server unless it is impossible for you to run a client. Its resources are very limited. The anonymous ftp site cs.bu.edu has a lot of information about IRC, as well as clients for almost every different operating system. You might also want the following files: /irc/support/alt-irc-faq Much more extensive information about IRC and how to use it. /irc/support/servers.* The complete list of publically accessible IRC servers. What do I do once I'm on IRC? IRC is very extensive and a complete description of all the commands is beyond the scope of this FAQ. Use the IRC command /help or read the alt.irc FAQ (see above). All new users of IRC should type /help newuser to get the new user information. Briefly, all commands in IRC begin with a slash (/). Anything you type that doesn't begin with a slash is sent to your current channel so that other users can read it. The command /join where is the channel name joins that channel. The command /quit will exit from IRC. Another important command is /ignore, which will allow you to ignore messages from annoying people (much like a Usenet killfile). Type /help ignore to get more information. If you have questions, just join #comics and ask someone. Most people will be glad to help. One other note: you will here about "ops" or "channel ops" a lot on IRC. A person who has "ops" on a channel has control over the way the channel functions. On #comics, we have found that ops is too often abused to be useful, so we usually make sure no one on #comics has ops. [end of part 3] "There are no net.gods, just some people with bigger mouths than others." -- Dan'l DanehyOakes, net.roach tyg tyg@hq.ileaf.com ****************************************************************************** ÿ@SUBJECT:Welcome to rec.arts.comics 4: Netiquette Message-ID: Newsgroup: rec.arts.comics.info,news.answers,rec.answers Organization: Interleaf, Inc. WELCOME TO REC.ARTS.COMICS (part 4 of 7: netiquette) written by lots of different people edited by Paul A. Estin 1990-1993 Tom Galloway 1993-present [last update: 11/03/93] 4. guidelines for posting articles First, if you haven't already done so, read the articles in news.announce.newusers, especially "A Primer on How to Work with the USENET Community". In fact, go read it even if you've read it before; the article contains many helpful suggestions. After you've done that, read these r.a.c-specific comments: The most common r.a.c. netiquette mistakes made by newbies are: 1) Posting X-Men related articles in r.a.c.misc. 2) Quoting an entire article being responded to. a) And only adding what amounts to "I dis/agree" at the end b) Quoting less than the entire article, but not by much. c) Quoting a .sig and without commenting on it. * Think about your audience. Make sure you post to the proper newsgroup, as explained in Part 1, on the r.a.c hierarchy and related newsgroups. * Have something to say, and support your arguments Post because you want to say something about comics, or ask a question about comics. Don't post to satisfy your ego. Respect other posters' opinions, though you may disagree with them. When arguing a point, rational argument with examples is preferable to sheer volume, or, worse, to personal attack. Say something substantive, that others would like to read and perhaps reply to. A special case of the above: If people aren't posting about a comic or character you're interested in, your best bet to start conversation about it is to post something relatively substantial about the topic. If you just post "I like Suicide Squid. Does anyone else?" it's doubtful you'll get much response. Posting "I like Suicide Squid because (reasons)" or "Does anyone know why this happened in Suicide Squid #37?" or even "Top Ten Reasons Suicide Squid Should Be Chopped Up Into Calimari (reasons)" will be much more likely to get discussion going. If you just post a complaint that Suicide Squid isn't being posted about, you'll basically get back that if you want Squiddy discussed, you should start a discussion. * Never forget that the person on the other side is human. This is a generally a friendly, tolerant newsgroup, and we like to keep it that way. One of the things which can destroy the pleasant atmosphere around here are "flames": inflammatory, insulting posts. People send articles saying things that they would never say to one another in person, perhaps because of the anonymity that electronic newsgroups provide. Please refrain from doing this. There *are* people on the other end of your message, and they're likely to take offense at your taking offense. The result is called a "flame war", and it wastes the time of everybody on the newsgroup. When you respond to an article, even one with which you vehemently disagree, try to respond to the *article*, not the poster; give reasoned rebuttal, not personal invective. Also, try not to dash off a reply in anger; you may regret it later. Instead, wait until after you've had some sleep and calmed down, before you reply. Finally, note that the best way to avoid a flame war with someone who is *obviously* looking for "attention" is to *ignore* that person. * Special note on "taste wars"... Of late [writing in late 1992], there's been an increasing amount of people bashing one another's tastes, using such invectives as "DC fans suck", "I hate you Marvel Zombies", "Marvel haters are a bunch of pretentious jerks", and so forth. The newsgroup r.a.c.xbooks was incorporated, for example, in hopes of splitting off those who read and rave about Marvel's X-titles from those who don't want to hear any more about them. Similarly, there seems to be an eternal war between the Image likers and haters. Consider this a special case of the above two categories. Have something to say, support your arguments, and argue against another post's substance or lack thereof, not to your assumed perception of its author. It *is* perfectly acceptable to post something like "People who read nothing but Marvel comics should try to look at some other comics; if you enjoyed you might like from company . Here's why..." or "I'm tired of people bashing those of us who read Marvel; I happen to *like* reading books and . Here's why..." Either of these sorts of posts is a *lot* more likely to convince people of the Rightness of Your Opinions than is loud spleen-venting. Furthermore, as a general rule, either liking or disliking an *entire company's output* is a position of questionable merit. Many have gotten to the point where they tend to follow favorite writers and artists, instead of characters or companies. While there can be noticible trends in companies' output, if a company does more than a handful of titles there's a good chance there's some title(s) you'll think are "better" or "worse" than what you might expect from that company on average. At the same time, though, people here *can* get awfully pretentious. The best thing to do, again, no matter which side you're on, is to back up your posts with *substance*, and to reply to specifics, because much of the arguing is due to misunderstanding another's position. * Be careful with humor and sarcasm. Subtle humor tends to be missed in text-only form. There is a standard net method for indicating sarcasm: the "smiley", a group of symbols which look like a smiley-face on its side, like this :-) (A post with a non-generic reference to Suicide Squid is also fairly likely to be less than serious...) * Use mail, don't post a follow-up Many types of replies are best given by private electronic mail, not posted to the entire newsgroup audience. This seems obvious, but many people ignore this. For example, if someone posts a poll or a trivia contest, you should reply to them by electronic mail. Don't post! As a special case of this, posts which ask for people to post their top N titles/storylines/characters/etc. should be discouraged. Unless these lists have reasonably detailed explanations of why the poster has these particular entries, they get old fast. Posting that you're running an email poll on the top N whatevers and will post results is much better. * Don't overdo signatures You can include a signature on the end of your posts. (In "rn", if you create a ".signature" file, it will be added automatically.) But keep it short. Nothing is more boring than wading through the same long signature repeated on multiple articles. A maximum of four lines is suggested (and, on some systems, four is the maximum possible). You may see some frequent posters use longer .sigs. In general, these are people who include particularly interesting quotes (or original writing) in their .sigs and change it on a weekly or even per message frequency. Ascii art and lettering, borders, etc. is old hat to most people, and multiple quotes in a single .sig are definitely frowned on. * Read all follow-ups and don't repeat what has already been said This is especially important for answering questions that lots of people know the answers to, such as "What's the name of that bald guy who founded the X-Men?" or "When did Elrod last appear in Cerebus?" If you want to respond to an article or query, mark it (use the "M" key in "rn"), make sure no one has already said what you want to, and *then* go back and reply. Or, just be safe and answer by e-mail instead of posting. * Don't repost just because there were no follow-ups Don't assume that, simply because there weren't any follow-ups to your post, that it didn't go out. *Most* messages do not generate any follow-ups. If you go and post the message again, simply because it didn't cause discussion the first time, you will simply annoy others and make yourself look foolish. If you're really concerned about whether your posts are making it out, you might email a poster at a site other than yours and ask if they'd check if they've received your posts. * When following up an article, quote only the appropriate amount of text. Many posting programs make it easy to include text from the article you're responding to. Take care to edit this text down to the minimum needed to understand your new contribution to the discussion. Many readers skip past articles with a lot of included text, particularly at the beginning of an article. A rule of thumb is that if you include more than 10 lines of quoted text at a time, you're almost certainly doing something wrong. More than 5 and you probably are. Including more than 20 quoted lines at the start of your post will insure that a fair number of people will *not* read it. Habitually including too many quoted lines gets you put in kill files. In particular, unless you are actually commenting on it in your post, there is no reason why you should ever include the .sig from an article you're responding to. The person's id is given at the start of the included text, and that's sufficient. * Double-check follow-up newsgroups and distributions "Cross-posting" is the practice of posting the same article to multiple newsgroups. If you're posting a review about the Akira movie, for example, then it would be relevant to the newsgroups rec.arts.anime and rec.arts.movies.reviews. Depending what you have to say (perhaps you are comparing the film to the manga version), it might also be relevant to rec.arts.comics.misc or rec.arts.manga. But try to limit crossposts as much as possible, and when you feel you *must* cross-post, include a "Follow-up:" line to only one of the newsgroups (in the sample case, probably "Follow-up: rec.arts.anime"). "Distribution" refers to how far a post will propagate. While the majority of r.a.c. readers and posters seem to be from the United States, there have been posts from Canada, Mexico, Europe, Africa, Asia, South America, and Australia/New Zealand, obviously meaning there are readers there as well. For general comics matters, the correct distribution will be "world" so as not to leave anyone out who isn't from your state/province, country, or continent. On the flip side, if you're posting about a local event, post to "local" distribution or whatever is appropriate (e.g., "nj" for New Jersey). Sometimes it's hard to tell what's appropriate; thus, if you're telling people about a convention in the Boston area, and some people from outside Massachusetts might be interested (likely true), then you may wish to post to a wider area, like "usa" or "na". But try to apologize in advance when you do. Also, distributions don't always work, so if you in Australia see a post for a small 1-day convention in Boston, don't flame or otherwise admonish the poster without first checking that the distribution line isn't in fact "ne" and the post has escaped its attempted limitation. * Cite appropriate references; don't use unnamed sources In r.a.c, this means that it's preferable to include your source when stating "news" or "rumors". For example, you might write, "I read in CBG that Alonzo Mori won't be writing Suicide Squid after issue #100." That's preferable to stating "I heard that..." Please note that claiming unnamed "inside sources" is an almost sure way of casting doubt on your credibility. People are only able to get away with this to any degree once they've built up a reputation of being reliable, have shown they do indeed know people in the industry, and when it's clear there's a good reason for the anonymity. Keep in mind that there are several people here who really do either know people in the industry or are actually professionals and have established a reputation for reliability. All doing this sort of thing will do is hurt your net.reputation for a long time, because you will get called on it. * Mark Answers or Spoilers Ever had someone tell you events in a movie that you wanted to see, spoiling the surprise? It's the same with comics. If something you say might "give away" information about a new comic, state "WARNING: SPOILERS" at the beginning and/or header of your article. Also, insert a "L" so that the article doesn't scroll. In the "emacs" editor, this is done by typing Q followed by L. In the "vi" editor, type V and then L. Note that the L must be the first character on a line for this to work. If you include quoted text which includes a L, you'll have to remove the quote indicator character(s) or space in front of it for it to work. * suggestions for reviews There are several people who post reviews of comics (usually on r.a.c.info) periodically. Feel free to post your own reviews. Jim Drew has helpfully provided the following suggested guidelines: Jim's Rules of Review (like Robert's Rules of Order, and followed as often B-) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 1. Don't review it if there is nothing to say about it. 2. Don't review *everything.* 3. Have a broad spectrum of reviews -- include something no one else will. 3.a. Don't be *too* esoteric -- include something from Marvel or DC, too. 4. Develop a style for your reviews that is uniquely your own. 5. Discuss the plot/themes/art/etc. "I liked it" is insufficient. People can e-mail Jim Drew directly for the expanded discussion. jrd@frame.com [end of Part 4] "There are no net.gods, just some people with bigger mouths than others." --Dan'l DanehyOakes, net.roach tyg tyg@hq.ileaf.com ****************************************************************************** ÿ@SUBJECT:Welcome to rec.arts.comics 5: FTP Resources Message-ID: Newsgroup: rec.arts.comics.info,rec.answers,news.answers Organization: Interleaf, Inc. WELCOME TO REC.ARTS.COMICS (part 5 of 7: ftp resources) written by lots of different people edited by Paul A. Estin 1990-1993 Tom Galloway 1993-present [last update: 11/03/93] 5. FTP sites containing comics related files. Many resources are available at different sites on the net via a mechanism called FTP (for File Transfer Protocol). If your system is fully on the Internet, use your local help command to get information about how to use FTP to access the files listed in this post. If your system is not fully on the Internet, it is still possible to access these files via email. Two addresses which provide FTP by email access are ftpmail@decwrl.dec.com and ftpmail@sunsite.unc.edu FTP commands should be placed in the body of your message to these addresses. Note that a human will not read your messages to these addresses, so don't bother putting anything other than FTP commands for the message body. To get a list of available commands and some information about this service, send the following message (the decwrl address is used for demo purposes) mail ftpmail@decwrl.dec.com Subject: help quit FTP Commands you should know about for getting files are as follows. Arguments you should specify are described in <>s. connect chdir dir get In general, you should use connect once, followed by a chdir, and if retrieving files, as many gets as you have file requests. Note that some sites limit the number of gets in a single message, usually to 10 or so. After a while you should get a mail response similar to this: From: "ftpmail service on ftp-gw-1.pa.dec.com" To: tyg@hq.ileaf.com Subject: your ftpmail request has been received We processed the following input from your mail message: We have entered the following request into our job queue as job number 746315939.01678: The message will conclude with how many jobs are ahead of yours, and that you should expect to get the results (i.e. your files) in a day or so. You cannot delete an FTPmail request once sent, so be careful. Nor can you request that only part of a file be sent. Large files will be divided up into equal sized chunks of a set number of characters (except for the last chunk, of course). Gopher is another utility for getting files from remote sites. If your system has gopher, use your local help facility to find out how to use it. If not, just use FTPmail. Please do not email the r.a.c. FAQ maintainer with questions about how to FTP or gopher. I don't know how your system is set up. The appropriate person to ask these questions of is your local system administrator. The above information is meant to help out people who do not have FTP access but would still like to get the information at various archive sites. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- A date in brackets, like [2/92], indicates the most recent month that an address and file(s) were confirmed/updated as still being valid. If a [?] is shown, I have not had a recent confirmation... if anyone can either confirm or deny a [?]. please email me. Also, if anyone tries emailing one of these addresses and gets no response, please email me and I'll try to check it out. I attempt to check the current status of one third of these each month. Thus, validation dates should be at most three months ago, once we complete the first three month cycle (which started with this post) [10/93] Posts that all newcomers to Usenet should read before posting are: Emily Postnews Answers Your Questions on Netiquette Rules for posting to Usenet A Primer on How to Work With the Usenet Community Answers to Frequently Asked Questions about Usenet Hints on writing style for Usenet What is Usenet? These should be available in the newsgroup news.announce.newusers, but if not they can be obtained via FTP from rtfm.mit.edu They are located there as the following files, all in the directory /pub/usenet/news.announce.newusers Emily_Postnews_Answers_Your_Questions_on_Netiquette A_Primer_on_How_to_Work_With_the_Usenet_Community Answers_to_Frequently_Asked_Questions_about_Usenet Rules_for_posting_to_Usenet Hints_on_writing_style_for_Usenet What_is_Usenet? [10/93] There is a major r.a.c. archive site at Ostfold Regional College in Norway. Either gopher to gopher.dhhalden.no or FTP to ftp.dhhalden.no (158.36.33.3). The administrator is Jon Lovstad . Please email him only if you encounter problems with the archive; he does this as volunteer labor. Do not ask him about general FTP matters. It is requested that the archive not be accessed during work hours of 0800-1800 Norway time. To be parochial for a moment, this is 0200-1400 United States and Canada Eastern Time. To be more general, this is Greenwich + 1 time. If you have material you'd like to be in the archive, please place it in the /incoming directory on the root level. Then mail Jon a list of what you've uploaded, along with a pointer as to where it belongs in the hierarcy. Files you should download first are 00_Full_Index, a full index of the archive, 00_Overview, an ls -lR of the archive, and 00_Readme, usage guidelines for the archive. What follows is an abbreviated version of archive contents as of 26 September 1993. /Annotations contains annotations of Ambush Bug, Asterix, Books of Magic, Doom Patrol, and Watchmen. /Batman has an episode guide and upcoming episodes of Batman:The Animated Series. /Beanworld has various information about Tales of the Beanworld, including an interview with Larry Marder, where to find Beanworld stuff, and back issues of Gunkldunk, the Internet Beanworld newsletter. /Cerebus has a checklist of Cerebus appearances, annotations of Cerebus 1-13, and a timeline. /Comics-L has back issues of the Comics-L digest. /Disney has information of getting more Disney related files and an index of Mickey Mouse cartoons on Laserdisc. /FAQ has Frequently Asked Questions (and answers) about Grendel, Legion of Super-Heroes, X-Fans, rec.arts.comics.marketplace, rec.arts.comics, Rogue, and X-Men characters. /Fanfiction has many subdirectories and contains net.fan-fiction such as the Net.Trenchcoat.Brigade and the Legion of Net.Heroes. /Guidelines has guidelines for submitting work to Caliber, DC, Dark Horse, Eclipse, Fantagraphics, Image, Malibu, Marvel, and Valiant. /Misc has comments about comics collector software, Antarctic Press news and information, Malibu's Bravura line, CBG subscription info, the Legend creator owned line, The MAXX mailing list, Matt Howarth catalog, Peter David's snail mail address, and why Shaman's Tears was cancelled /Previews has information about upcoming comics. /Reference has an Alan Moore checklist, a list of comics libraries, comics fanclubs list, an index of comics reference lists, an index of comics related theses, how copyright works, a cover enhancement glossary, index of crossovers, index of Hard Looks, index of horror and sci-fi comics, Jack Kirby checklist, Peter David checklist, Star Trek comics checklist, and an index of references to Superman in song lyrics. /Releases has Jim Cowling's weekly list of new releases for the last few months. /Reviews has reviews of Comic Book Rebels, The Complete Crumb Comics, Hero Illustrated, Saint Sinner, and the review columns Sidekick Reviews, Image Review, and Valiant Review. /Statistics has ordering stats for top UK comics, top US comics for several months, publishers' market share, and the print run on some Marvel titles. For some reason, it also has Jim Cowling's Top Ten Things Newbies Say. /Strips has bibliographies of Calvin & Hobbes and Peanuts collections. /Toys has a list of ToyBiz Marvel figures and a peek at the 1994 line of same. /Trading_Cards has nothing yet, but is open to files of checklists, print runs, price guides, etc. /X-Men has the r.a.c.xbooks FAQ, a list of Marvel characters who have appeared on the animated X-Men, the X-Men creators list, synoses of X-Men 120-280, an X-Men timeline, and a reprint guide. [10/93] A second major r.a.c. archive is at teetot.acusd.edu This can be reached either by gophering to that location, or by FTPing. The root directory if FTPing is /pub/Beelzebub/Comics If gophering, the sequence of menu numbers/items is: --> 6. Everything else that matters... --> 4. Light ( and otherwise ) reading material --> 1. Comic Books The following files are there. They are listed in directory format, with each directory being a Gopher menu item. Obviously some of the directory names aren't exact; the spaces are rather doubtful for example, but this should provide sufficient clues for FTPers to find them via ls commands. About_Comics/Business has files on Antarctic Press information, Crash Course Studios, and Dez Skinn suing Eclipse. About_Comics/Top_BW_Comics has lists of the top color and black and white comics for various months, as well as lists of the top publishers by market share for those months. About_Comics/Comics Theses has a list of comic related ms/phd thesis About_Comics/Comics Works Reference List has a list of comics reference books. About_Comics/Comics_News has comic related stories from various newspapers. About_Comics/Essays has essays about comics and music, and comics in Europe. About_Comics/Comics_Code_Authority has discussion about and history of the CCA. About_Comics/Libraries with Comics has a list of comic carrying libraries. Annotations_and_Information has annotations and/or checklists on Asterix, Cherry, Doom Patrol, Fantastic Four, Horror and Sci-Fi, Jack Kirby, the Legion of Super-Heroes FAQ, Sandman FAQ, various reviews and interviews relating to Sandman, Stan Lee on Larry King Show, Stanley and his Monster, the Superman FAQ, Understanding Comics, and the Watchmen annotations. Comic Book Legal Defense Fund has information about same Comics_as_a_Career has information about breaking into comics and Berni Wrightson on writing. Guidelines has submission guidelines from Blue Comet, Caliber, DC, Dark Horse, Eclipse, Fantagraphics, Image, Malibu, Marvel, and Voyager. Misc.Writing has general information about writing from the misc.writing newsgroup. Peter_David has a But I Digress column which Peter gave permission to post and how he writes scripts for Marvel. Rob_Davis has much information by Rob Davis about working in comics, particularly as an artist. Conventions has reviews of the 1993 Philadelphia Comicfest and the 1993 San Diego Comics Con by many r.a.c.ers. Humor has the annotated Ambush Bug, a Hulk Death Survey, parody lyrics for Muties for Nothing, and a self-censorship comics code. Interviews has Usenet interviews with Dave Sim, Denny O'Neil, Eddie Campbell, Evan Dorkin, K. C. Carlson, Steve Gerber, and Tony Lobito. Net_Resources has information about comics related BBSs, High Weirdness by FTP, and the Norwegian r.a.c. FTP site. New_Comics has reviews and information about Dirtbag, Nina's Adventures, Harvey Pekar and Joyce Brabner, Roland Gethers, and Terror Tots. Operation_Crazed_Ferret has files for computer animations of the Animated Cerebus portfolio. Welcome_to_Rec.Arts.Comics has the Welcome to r.a.c. postings. [10/93] Disney comics The archive of the disney-comics mailing list (see below) contains indexes of many old and new Disney comics, a Don Rosa index, as well as some other information on Disney comics. ftp: from ftp.lysator.liu.se, directory pub/comics/disney. There is an FTP by email server on this machine; send mail to: ftpserv@lysator.liu.se with the word HELP as the body of your message for information on how to use it. (this information provided by Per Starback, Uppsala, Sweden. email: starback@student.docs.uu.se) [5/93] X-Men files (archived files available via anonymous FTP) darwin.cc.nd.edu /pub/comics/X-Men-files is the directory [10/93] Connie Hirsch's New Mutants novel, _Kid Dynamo_. ftp: from ocf.berkeley.edu, directory /pub/Comics/Kid_Dynamo email: goldfarb@ocf.berkeley.edu (David Goldfarb) [10/93] Sandman annotations by Greg Morrow (morrow@fnal.fnal.gov) Books of Magic annotations by David Goldfarb (goldfarb@ocf.berkeley.edu) Watchmen annotations by Doug Atkinson (douga@yang.earlham.edu) Suicide Squid discussions (all Suicide Squid posts from Day One; LONG) David Wald (wald@theory.lcs.mit.edu) has made these available by both ftp and email. For Sandman, the filenames are "Index", for the index of files, and "sandman.01" and up for the annotations. BY FTP: ftp to theory.lcs.mit.edu or 18.52.0.92, and look in the directory pub/wald/sandman [for the other files, the directories are:] pub/wald/books-of-magic pub/wald/watchmen pub/wald [suicide-squid file] BY EMAIL: send mail containing the line "send wald sandman/filename" to archive-server@theory.lcs.mit.edu. Thus, to fetch the index of currently available annotations, send email with the line "send wald sandman/Index". If you can't get this to work, try sending email to the archive server containing only the word "help". [for the other files, "send wald suicide-squid"] [10/93] Superman FAQ davidc@leland.Stanford.EDU (David Thomas Chappell) Available via anonymous FTP at garfield.catt.ncsu.edu 152.1.43.23 /pub/misc/superman.txt ftp.dhhalden.no 158.36.33.3 /pub/Comics/FAQ/Superman.FAQ [10/93] Animated Cerebus portfolio animations (aka Operation: Crazed Ferret) Color version anonymous ftp at: asylum.sf.ca.us /pub/cerebus/crazed-ferret Grayscale version anonymous ftp at: sunsite.unc.edu /pub/multimedia/pictures/OTIS/animations Both sites have the same filenames of: bar.qt.cpt.hqx = "A Well Equipped Bar" for Macs bar.avi for "IBM"s bat.qt.cpt.hqx = "Add One Mummified Bat" bat.avi sword.qt.cpt.hqx = "His First Sword" sword.avi README and ferret.readme = essential info about all kinds of stuff [9/93] Usenet interview with Dave Sim (creator of _Cerebus_) Cerebus Companion (from soda.berkeley.edu) available via anonymous ftp; connect to "asylum.sf.ca.us" /pub/cerebus/sim-interview/1 /pub/cerebus/sim-interview/2 /pub/cerebus/sim-interview/3 /pub/cerebus/sim-interview/4 /pub/cerebus/sim-interview/5 /pub/cerebus/sim-interview/6 /pub/cerebus/companion [?] Watchmen discussion (archives in an FTP site, *not* an e-mail address). These are the archived net.comics discussions of Watchmen from 1985-6 as the book came out. LONG ftp.white.toronto.edu /pub/comics/watchmen is the correct path [end of part 5] "There are no net.gods, just some people with bigger mouths than others." -- Dan'l DanehyOakes, net.roach tyg tyg@hq.ileaf.com ****************************************************************************** ÿ@SUBJECT:Welcome to rec.arts.comics 6: Email Resources Message-ID: Newsgroup: rec.arts.comics.info,news.answers,rec.answers Organization: Interleaf, Inc. WELCOME TO REC.ARTS.COMICS (part 6 of 7: email net sources) written by lots of different people edited by Paul A. Estin 1990-1993 Tom Galloway 1993-present [last update: 11/03/93] 6. e-mail addresses to ask for various types of comics-related files Various files are available from people via e-mail. Simply e-mail the appropriate list-holder, providing them with appropriate supplications, plus a valid e-mail return address. If you have any comics-related files you'd be willing to e-mail to supplicants, please e-mail tyg@hq.ileaf.com so I can add you to the list. (Feel free to e-mail me for any other appropriate changes, too.) A date in brackets, like [2/92], indicates the most recent month that an address and file(s) were confirmed/updated as still being valid. If a [?] is shown, I have not had a recent confirmation... if anyone can either confirm or deny a [?]. please email me. Also, if anyone tries emailing one of these addresses and gets no response, please email me and I'll try to check it out. I attempt to check the current status of one third of these each month. Thus, validation dates should be at most three months ago, once we complete the first three month cycle (which started with this post) [2/92] to post to r.a.c.*, for people with mailing but not posting privileges, mail your post to the following address (it will be auto-posted): rec.arts.comics.misc@news.cs.indiana.edu [and similarly for the other r.a.c.* groups.] to receive r.a.c.* by email in digest form, for people without a newsreader, contact: [10/93] Jimmy Aitken jimmy@pyramid.com jimmy@pyra.co.uk ...!mcsun!ukc!pyrltd!jimmy [3/93] MJ Dominus "I don't guarantee anything." mjd@saul.cis.upenn.edu [10/93] results of past years' rec.arts.comics polls of favorites from 1990-2 Mickey McCarter mickey@bach.udel.edu [10/93] To Protect and Preserve: how to protect comics from damage Paul Adams paul@erc.msstate.edu [10/93] the Legion of Net.Heroes FAQ (LNH) barnejd@wkuvx1.bitnet [10/93] the rec.arts.comics.marketplace FAQ Jim Cowling jcowling@sol.UVic.CA [6/93] Canonical List of X-Men Dangling Plotlines (begun by Laura Burchard) Robi Karp robi@adacel.com.au [8/93] X-creators FAQ "contains information about the writers, artists, and editors for every issue of X-Men, X-Force, Excalibur, X-Factor, and New Mutants. It also contains full information for Uncanny X-Men back to issue #115 (always looking for additions!)" email: Eric Jaron Stieglitz ejs16@cunixb.cc.columbia.edu [10/93] Canonical list of sales gimmicks and cover gags (last update 6/93) Michael A. Hall HALLMA@CDA.MRS.UMN.EDU [10/93] Star Trek comics checklist, README Star Trek comics checklist, Part 1/3 Star Trek comics checklist, Part 2/3 Star Trek comics checklist, Part 3/3 Holmes Illustrated (Sherlock Holmes comics) Peter A. David: The write stuff (his published works, including comics) Mark Martinez mlbm@lanl.gov [10/93] X-Men History and Character List Martin Phipps cxmp@musica.mcgill.ca [10/93] Hispanic Supers List jorge@clark.net (Jorge DeLaCruz) [10/93] Legion of Super-Heroes FAQ douga@yang.earlham.edu (Doug Atkinson) [11/92] lists of Black superheroes, Jewish superheroes the Claremont files (an xbooks thing) administration of LNH faq and associated lists SCAVENGER (kogutt@ucsu.colorado.edu) [9/92] Canonical List of Excalibur Dangling Plotlines Alan Davis comicography Rich Carreiro rlcarr@animato.network23.com uunet.uu.net!animato!rlcarr uunet!animato!rlcarr [5/92] Eddie Campbell Index Marcus Brazil matmnb@lure.latrobe.edu.au [2/92] Cerebus Guide ("appearances and reprints" checklist and other r.a.c info) Jim Dean jimdean@bnr.ca [2/92] Bill Sienkiewicz comicography (by the way, it's pronounced sin-KEV-itch): History of Legion of Super-Heroes History of X-Men #190-present Politically Correct Definition of "Graphic Novel" Suggestions on Making Comic Book Submissions Submission Guidelines: DC Comics (writer and artist) Submission Guidelines: Ciao! (fanzine) Jim Drew jrd@frame.com [2/92] Silicon Valley comic shops Garrett Lau lau@efi.com uunet!efi!lau [?] Canonical List of X-Factor Dangling Plotlines Kenneth Arromdee UUCP: ...!jhunix!arromdee BITNET: arromdee@jhuvm INTERNET: arromdee@crabcake.cs.jhu.edu [2/92] Prisoner mini-series archive Moriarty, aka Jeff Meyer INTERNET: moriarty@tc.fluke.COM UUCP: {uunet, uw-beaver, sun, microsoft}!fluke!moriarty [2/92] Donna Barr Checklist Steve Gallacci Checklist back logs of alt.fan.furry (Sept 91 to present) Aleph Null Prefered address: mhigh@vm1.tucc.trinity.edu Might also try: mhigh@trinity.edu mhigh@trinity.bitnet mhigh%trinity@ricevm1.rice.edu [?] Back issues of Martin Terman's Comic Reviews Martin Terman mfterman@phoenix.princeton.edu mfterman@pucc.bitnet [2/92] questions/letters pertaining to Brave New Words (friend of the publisher) on-line back-issue catalog of Brave New Words Marshall Vale Internet: mjv@brownvm.brown.edu Bitnet: mjv@brownvm.bitnet [2/92] list of the episodes of the Flash TV series Ernie Oporto EAO102@PSUVM.PSU.EDU [end of part 6] "There are no net.gods, just some people with bigger mouths than others." -- Dan'l DanehyOakes, net.roach tyg tyg@hq.ileaf.com ****************************************************************************** ÿ@SUBJECT:Welcome to rec.arts.comics 7: Mailing Lists Message-ID: Newsgroup: rec.arts.comics.info,news.answers,rec.answers Organization: Interleaf, Inc. WELCOME TO REC.ARTS.COMICS (part 7 of 7: mailing lists) written by lots of different people edited by Paul A. Estin 1990-1993 Tom Galloway 1993-present [last update: 11/03/93] 7. e-mail addresses of comics-related mailing lists. Besides the newsgroups in the r.a.c hierarchy, you can also subscribe to various mailing lists on specific topics (sort of like a mini-newsgroup) and have messages sent to your email address. You can subscribe to any of the following mailing lists by emailing a request to the appropriate email address. Please note that the appropriate address for subscribing and unsubscribing is often different from the address of the list itself, that is, the address to which one does the equivalent of "posting" articles. "comics-l", a listserv discussion list to subscribe, send a request to: comics-l@utcvm.bitnet (address of list itself: Comics-L@unlvm.unl.edu or Comics-L@unlvm.BITNET) "non-mainstream" comics to subscribe: comix-request@world.std.com List of new comics released each week to subscribe: jcowling@sol.UVic.CA Cerebus mailing list to subscribe: mail majordomo@erzo.berkeley.edu with the following message body (not subject): subscribe cerebi to unsubscribe: mail to the same address with the body: unsubscribe cerebi to post to the list, mail to cerebi@erzo.berkeley.edu Gunk'l'dunk : moderated newsletter for fans of _Tales_Of_The_Beanworld_ contact jeremy@stat.cmu.edu Omnicom: the Online Legion of Super-Heroes APA (LSH mailing list) send your email address and a subscription request to: omnicom-list-request@andrew.cmu.edu [info provided by Vernon H Harmon vh00+@andrew.cmu.edu] Disney comics mailing list to subscribe: disney-comics-request@student.docs.uu.se (Per Starback) "Poison Elves" (by Drew Hayes, formerly "I, Lusiphur") mailing list to subscribe or for more info contact either: Elric Of Melnibone (n8943689@honeydew.cc.wwu.edu) or Windigo (cl238527@ulkyvx.louisville.edu) Put "Lusiphur Mailinglist" in the subject header of your message. Small Press mailing list to subscribe: small-press-request@world.std.com (small-press@world.std.com) This mailing list deals in part with small press comics, although be warned that it also deals with zines, small book publishers, small magazine publishers, literary journals, and so forth. The list tends to be more aimed at publishing and getting published (and getting copies from people who publish), than it is about content. There is also a newsgroup "alt.zines". Valiant Visions newsletter About Valient Comics. To join, send email to the editor, Chris Vitek, at cvitek@drew.drew.edu [end of Part 7] "There are no net.gods, just some people with bigger mouths than others." - Dan'l DanehyOakes, net.roach tyg tyg@hq.ileaf.com ******************************************************************************