BEFORE:

AFTER:

This story is just so weird I thought it was a joke when I first saw it.
During the first Iranian hostage crises in 1979, a lucky few escaped the takeover of the American embassy, but were unable to escape the country as Iranian students hot for the Ayatollah Khomeini chanted “Allah is Great!” and “Death to America!”
You got what you asked for. Enjoy your religious police and crazy mullahs.
Anyway…
The CIA devised a plan to use the cover of a sci-fi film crew to smuggle the hostages out of Iran, and Jack Kirby storyboards became a prop in the plan. The fantastic story can be found at Wired.
Everyone was in costume before dawn on January 28, 1980. Cora Lijek had used sponge curlers to give herself a Shirley Temple look. She thumbed through the script as they waited. Kathy Stafford donned heavy, bohemian-looking glasses, pinned up her hair, and carried a sketch pad and folder with Kirby’s concept drawings. Mark Lijek’s dirty-blond beard had been darkened with mascara. Anders thought of their escape as an adventure and flung himself into his role as Argo‘s flamboyant director: He appeared in a shirt two sizes too small, buttoned only halfway up his hairy chest to reveal an improvised silver medallion. He wore sunglasses, combed his hair over his ears, and acted slightly effeminate. Schatz played with his lens. During the previous two days, they’d done several dress rehearsals, with a Farsi-speaking staffer from the Canadian embassy dressing up in fatigues for mock interrogations, probing for cracks in their cover. They’d learned the movie’s story line and their characters’ backgrounds and motivations and were now waiting, essentially, for call time…
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After an an amazing reception at this past weekend’s ComicsPRO, writer Ivan Brandon and illustrator Nic Klein’s upcoming ongoing series, VIKING, now faces a pre-release distribution-level sellout of unprecedented proportions despite a very significant overprint, resulting in an near-immediate second printing.
“I can’t thank the retailers enough for the crazy amount of support they’ve shown for us.” Brandon said. “This book is a lot of years in progress and for Nic and I to see this kind of reception… I spent the weekend giddy and humbled and half-waiting to wake up and find out I’d imagined the whole thing. We overprinted by a lot, hoping there’d be word of mouth above our initial orders. To sell out, before the public’s even seen the book… it’s so far beyond what I could ever have hoped far. To make sure as many copies get out there as possible, we’ll be releasing the first printing on April 22nd, with a massive second printing in stores two weeks later on May 6th, to make sure there’s not a huge wait for anyone.”
VIKING, heralded as a crime comic for the 9th century, follows the story of two brothers looking to make their way up the ladder of the Norse criminal underground only to find they’re quickly biting off more than they could ever hope to chew. Nic Klein’s lush renditions of Ivan Brandon’s hard-boiled storytelling results in what has been retailers and press already praising it as the buzz book release of April. The variant cover will feature a slightly tweaked version of Klein’s original gorgeous cover and will retain the series’ high-quality production values and Golden Age dimensions.
ComicsPRO Board Member and Lonestar Comics General Manager Chris Powell added, “At our ComicsPRO meeting, [Image Comics PR & Marketing Coordinator] Joe Keatinge brought a copy of VIKING #1 for retailers to look at. Everything about the book screamed ‘big hit’, from story to art to production values. I love the fact that it’s a larger trim size with heavy textured paper that compliments the ‘feel’ of the book nicely. We upped our orders via telephone from the meeting, and can’t wait to put this book into the hands of our customers!”
VIKING #1 (FEB092371), a 32-page full color comic book for $2.99, will be in stores April 22nd. The second printing will follow on May 6th, 2009. Retailers interested in learning more about ComicsPRO can find more details at www.comicspro.org.
The Onion report on a newly discovered dinosaur: The Pervertasaurus.
Paleontologists Discover Skeleton Of Nature’s First Sexual Predator
We hear tootsie rolls had a pacific effect on this lowly class of ancient lounge lizard.

Dear heaven, this blind tootsie roll illness is worth than I already diagnosed.
Hi Colleen,
I just wanted to thank you for your post on the Graphics Artists Guild
back in August. I just joined up in January and got a great small
business insurance quote through their alliance with the United States
Federation of Small Businesses.
Steve Horton
You are most welcome. We’ve gotten a lot of people hooked up with insurance from that post. Glad it worked for you, too. Click here to read for yourself.
Dear Ms. Doran,
I first discovered your books at the public library when i was in sixth grade and while at the time I didn’t fully understand the complexities of the story I immediately fell in love with it as well as the characters. Once I got older I was able to fully appreciate the beautiful world you’d created and fell in love all over again. I was never able to find the fourth volume which was troubling, but eventually I gave up. Having stumbled upon your website and seeing that you’ve decided to post all of Distant Soil gave me a pleasure I haven’t felt in some time. Thank you so much! I can’t wait to get reacquainted with everyone again! I’m equally delighted that I’m able to contact you and let you know just how much I’ve enjoyed reading your books. (It’s especially fun to read about your influences and comments on the characters. I wish more authors did this.) Again, thank you so much for sharing your work with everyone! I look forward to finally completing the series I love so much.
Sincerely,
Shawn
an old fan
You are most welcome, Shawn. I am most appreciative of every library which carries my books. And very appreciative of letters like yours. It is extremely kind of you to take time out of your day to give me these words of encouragement!
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