My writing process – 10 years in

Each year I write 24 columns for The Fort Wayne Reader along with a handful of other longer pieces that I post to my site. Since I know the publishing schedule of the Reader throughout the year I can plan ahead. I write most of my stuff in WordPress which is the CMS for my website. In the CMS I have a page setup that lists all the dates the Reader hits the stands and I plan on what I’m going to write around these dates. Like this year the movie Man of Steel was released in theaters June 14, so when I was planning on what to write I took note of that date and scheduled a column on Superman for June 7.

As the year progresses more and more dates are filled in. These slots aren’t always permanent, sometimes I’ll schedule a topic months in advance but end up writing about something else if things change. For example, I was originally going to write about the movie Riddick back in early September and had that date scheduled on my calendar for some time. But after I had an interesting experience selling some comics on eBay I wanted to write about that instead and Riddick got bumped.

With the calendar I’ll also figure on things I’d like to write about but don’t have a specific date on when to write them. I currently have things jotted down like “Planet of the Apes movies” since there’s a new one of those coming in 2014, “the need for a trilogy?” as in why do movie series HAVE to come in threes and “Parker comic books” since I dig those. But if I’ll actually write anything about those topics is anyone’s guess but they’re all a possibility.

Here’s how the schedule for early 2014 is shaping up:

  • 1/18 – The Americans?
  • 2/1 – ?
  • 2/15 – Summer movie preview ++
  • 3/1 –  Hannibal?

“?” in my notes means that the topic is still tentative, but the dates coincide when the new seasons of The Americans and Hannibal premiers so they work. The “++” means I’m definitely going to write about this topic but I haven’t written anything yet. Or, more precisely, I haven’t written enough about it to make me feel comfortable that the writing process is over and the editing has begun.

As I write this I have four columns all in various states of completion. The way the due dates for my columns work is that I need to send them in two weeks before they’re published. So, my The X-Files column was published on a Friday and the next column was due the following Monday.

Here’s how the next four columns are shaping up:

  • 10/4 – “The Online TV Revolution”:  This column won’t see publication until early October, but I first wrote down the idea for it in early August and also jotted down some basic notes for it then too. I see that there are about a dozen revisions to this column before I got this one in a good place and got down to basic editing and word choices.
  • 10/18 – “HALLOWEEN Maximum Overdrive”: I started planning for this column back in July. This one was actually an easy to write once I settled on the idea that Maximum Overdrive is actually a nearly great movie. There were only around five major revisions before I got this one in a good place. Part of my process too is sitting on nearly finished pieces for a few weeks so I can reread with fresh eyes, so who knows what I’ll think of this one next week when I read it?
  • 11/1 – “Ender’s Hunger Games”: Right now I’ve got about three major edits to this one but since it doesn’t print for a while it may change greatly between now and then.
  • 11/15 – “Doctor Who”: Since this one has to do with the Doctor Who anniversary I’ve been planning on writing something about it since last winter and actually started writing it last summer. Unfortunately, since much of what I wrote was about the new Doctor’s all being relatively young I had to rewrite much of what I’d already written once a new, older, Doctor was chosen as the lead earlier this summer. While this doesn’t print for nearly two months as I write this, I think it’s in a good place and I don’t foresee any major changes to it between now and then.

MORE: The actual writing process

The X-Files, one of the greats, turns 20

Fox Mulder and Dana Scully, David Duchovny and  Gillian Anderson respectively
Fox Mulder and Dana Scully, David Duchovny and Gillian Anderson respectively

There are a few TV series that I consider “mine.” These are the series that I started watching before they were cool, before they were featured on the covers of magazines, before the actors became international superstars, before the series were spun-off into movies… One of these shows I consider “mine” is The X-Files.

I had just started college the fall of 1993 when The X-Files premiered. While my peers were spending their Friday nights doing various age appropriate things like going to parties, I spent that time at home on the computer visiting our local BBS while also watching The X-Files. When the show premiered, I didn’t know anyone else who was watching it, not even my friends who were into that kind of thing. But slowly, over the preceding months, The X-Files started to gain traction and after a while people who weren’t into horror-TV were watching the show and talking about it.

Pic from the temporarily banned "Home" episode
Pic from the temporarily banned “Home” episode

The X-Files followed two FBI agents, Fox Mulder (David Duchovny) and Dana Scully (Gillian Anderson) who investigated the X-Files, or weird uninvestigatable cases that included everything from UFOs to ghosts to bigfoot that the FBI didn’t know what to do with. Mulder, the “I want to believe” guy, clashed with more even-minded Scully who, while not a total disbeliever, would search out scientific explanations for the oddities they uncovered during their investigations.

Some episodes of The X-Files dealt with various monsters, ghouls and weird goings-on around the country and others focused on an underlying governmental conspiracy in place to keep all this quiet. These conspiracy episodes are what comprised the overarching plot of The X-Files. Essentially, this story boiled down to why are aliens visiting the Earth and why is the government trying to cover this up? And, furthermore, what devious plans do the aliens have for us and our planet?scully-mulder

In the early days of the series me, along with millions of other people, gobbled all this up with glee. For years The X-Files was my favorite show and I eagerly followed it from Friday nights to Sundays when it made a move to a more desirable time slot.

The Lone Gunmen
The Lone Gunmen

A feature film was released in ’98 titled The X-Files: Fight the Future that was reportedly going to shed some light on the conspiracy storylines of the show. While I saw the movie opening night I’m still not sure if it revealed anything new other than featuring some cool “only on a movie budget” sized special effects.

After the film, The X-Files returned to TV and just got bigger and bigger. And when it didn’t seem like the show could get any more popular it got immensely more popular with people buying The X-Files comics, trading cards and Duchovny and Anderson and other co-stars being literally mobbed at fan events and conventions.

At one point nearly 30 million people were watching the show each week. To put that number in perspective, the most popular scripted show last season was The Big Bang Theory that has something like 19 million viewers tuning in. And The X-Files was a dark, hour-long bleak drama that was a downer most of the time and not some peppy half hour comedy.

But like all things The X-Files could not last. By the time Duchovny and later Anderson left the show to be replaced by other stars, the sparkle had gone and the series eventually ended it’s run after nine seasons. And thinking about the show more than a decade after the series ended I’m still not sure what the conspiracy fueling The X-Files was ultimately all about!

The "aliens" of The X-Files
The “aliens” of The X-Files

While The X-Files may have gone on for a season or few too long, in my heart it’s still one of the greats. I think that series like Lost (conspiracy!), American Horror Story (genuinely creepy TV horror!) or Hannibal (FBI agents investigate he bizarre!) owe a great deal to the foundations laid by The X-Files.

Those first four or five seasons of The X-Files still shine with a brilliant sort of creepiness that makes me want to reconsider what the very fabric of the universe is made of. My personal favorite episode? “Jose Chung’s from Outer Space,” of course. All episodes of the series are available on DVD and Netflix instant.

How I made $1,500 selling 3 comic books on eBay

The Walking Dead #1
The Walking Dead #1

Typically I don’t collect things because I think they’ll increase in value, I collect things because I think they’re cool. That’s why I bought the first issue of the comic book The Walking Dead (TWD) back in 2003, because I thought it was cool and was interested in the story. After I’d read the comic a few times, I bagged it up, filed it away in one of my comic book boxes and all but forgot about it.

Until recently, that is.

A few weeks back I noticed a local comic shop had posted on Facebook that were surprised to see that the first issue TWD was worth $800. I didn’t believe this since a) TWD #1 came out less than 10 years ago and conventional wisdom says that only comics 50+ years old are worth that much and b) no comic I’ve ever owned has been worth much of anything.

Sure, I’ve had a few comics over the years that were worth $20 or $30, but $800? Out of the question.

An interior look at The Walking Dead #1
An interior look at The Walking Dead #1

But that post had my interest piqued, even if TWD #1 were worth $100 I might be able to make a few bucks selling it. So I did a bit of research and found that TWD #1 wasn’t worth $800, it was actually worth closer to $1,000! And a cursory search on eBay revealed that several issues of TWD #1 there had active bidders, which is important, with bids upwards of $500+.

Why is TWD #1 worth so much? Two reasons. First the TWD TV series is incredibly popular and secondly early issues of the comic had very short print runs. For example, while a popular comic today might sell 200,000 copies, reports indicate that only around 7,000 copies TWD #1 were ever printed making it a rarity for collectors looking to own it today.

Me holding all three comics that would be valued at around $1,500
Me holding all three comics that would be valued at around $1,500

Having collected comics all my life and seeing the insane price swings that comics can take and the fact that what’s popular today won’t necessarily be popular tomorrow, I wanted to sell my copy of TWD #1 as fast as I could and make as much as I could while I still had the chance. Knowing that the comic could easily increase in value later on but it could just as easily decrease in price faster than I could sell it.

First I had to find my copy of TWD #1. I’ve got boxes and boxes and boxes of comics and I had to dig through practically all of them to find it. In my digging I also found copies of TWD #2 and #3 that I had bought back then too. And, luckily for me, all were in great shape with no scuffs or corner dings. So I took photos of my stash and put each issue in eBay under separate auctions all with starting bids of $25 each.

Within five minutes of posting the auctions I had bidders contacting me wanting me to pull the auction and sell them the comic directly, which I took as a good sign of interest. By the next day bidders had sent #1 to over $200 and that’s where I thought the auction would sit for the next week until closer to the end of the auction.

But that’s not what happened.

The final day of my auction
The final day of my auction

Over the coming days more and more people bid on my TWD #1 auction, and in no time the comic was sitting at nearly $600. And to be honest, I was ecstatic that something I had bought for $3 was worth even that much. But on the last day of the auction the bidding really took off. First $700, then $800 then $900. At one point the bids were coming so fast that the eBay app on my phone let out a series of “dings” to let me know new bids had been placed for nearly ten straight seconds.

Proof positive it was the first printing of issue #1
Proof positive it was the first printing of issue #1

Then the auction settled at $1,000 and I began to literally shake. Somehow I had gotten lucky, had won a sort of nerd-lottery and had a copy of the most desirable comic out there at one of the most desirable times to be selling that comic.

In the end I got $1,050 for TWD #1 and that along with #2 and #3 would net me right around $1,500 for all three issues, of which eBay would take about $50 in fees and I would spend more than that to insure and ship the comics to the various winners.

What do I plan on doing with the money? Using it as a slush fund to buy more comics and toys, of course!

2013/14 TV Preview – New Shows

There’s nothing new about sci-fi and horror series on network TV. But for every hit series like Star Trek, Lost or The X-Files there are three forgettable ones like Space Rangers, Threshold and Strange World. However, with the success of cable series like The Walking Dead and Game of Thrones and the COLOSSAL success of movies like The Avengers, regardless of the probability of success the networks are set to roll out at least TEN new sci-fi-superhero-horror-fantasy series next season.

Almost Human
Almost Human

Debuting Mondays starting September 16 is Sleepy Hollow and later on November 4 Almost Human, both on Fox. In Sleepy Hollow, Ichabod Crane (Tom Mison) falls asleep in the 1700s and awakens in 2013 ready to do battle with monsters and ghouls while in Almost Human, it’s the year 2048 and cops are partnered up with robots. Why? Because that’s apparently a thing in the future. John Kennex (Karl Urban) doesn’t get along with his robot-partners until he meets robot-cop outcast Dorian (Michael Ealy) in which he finds a plastic pal. Oddly enough, Almost Human is not the first future cop teams up with robot TV series, that distinction goes to the dreadful 1992 series Mann & Machine.

Agents of SHIELD
Agents of SHIELD

Tuesdays starting September 24 is Marvel Agents of SHIELD on ABC. This series takes the covert, behind the scenes spooks of the Marvel movies and brings them to network TV. Here, Agent Coulson (Clark Gregg) returns from the dead, he was killed-off in the movies, in order to investigate the weird and wacky goings on in the rest of the Marvel universe. Think The X-Files meets The Avengers and that seems to be what ABC is going for here. Honestly, the only reason I’m excited by this show is that it’s being produced by Joss Whedon who wrote and directed The Avengers and created the TV series Buffy the Vampire Slayer and Firefly as well.

Tomorrow People
Tomorrow People

Also on Tuesdays starting October 15 on CW is The Vampire Diaries spin-off series The Originals about a family of vampires living in New Orleans. Wednesdays starting October 9 is The Tomorrow People also on CW. Based on a British series of the same name, this one looks like it’s going for a “the world just doesn’t understand us” X-Men vibe, but with gorgeous-looking CW actors.

The Once Upon a Time spin-off Once Upon a Time in Wonderland debuts Thursdays October 10 on ABC. If Once Upon a Time deals with all sorts of fairy tale characters from Snow White to Rumplestiltskin to Jiminy Cricket, the Wonderland series deals with characters from the Alice in Wonderland stories. TOTALLY different and unique.

Dracula
Dracula

Also on Thursdays beginning October 9 is Reign on CW. Reign follows 16th century teen Mary Stuart as she grows into the woman who would eventually become Mary, Queen of Scots. But with gorgeous-looking CW actors.

Just in time for Halloween on Friday, October 25 the series Dracula debuts on NBC. This period piece set in London in the the 19th century stars Jonathan Rhys Meyers in the title role as the lead blood-sucker. This one seems part Downton Abbey (it’s in England around the turn of the century) mixed with Twilight (here, Dracula isn’t a bad guy, but a doey-eyed misunderstood vamp who pines for the love of a woman).

Intelligence
Intelligence

In February Intelligence on CBS looks to be a cross between the Six Million Dollar Man, Chuck and The Bourne Identity with a lead character who seems very much to be taken from the mold of Sawyer from Lost. Which is lucky for CBS since Intelligence stars Josh Holloway who played Sawyer in Lost.

I think the main challenge these sci-fi-superhero-horror-fantasy series are going to face next season is that they’re entering an already crowded marketplace of shows that are all already kind’a popular like Revolution, Arrow, Grimm, Falling Skies, etc. So if they fail to bring something new to the genera, I can’t really see them lasting too long.

If I were the betting kind, I’d place my money on Marvel Agents of SHIELD as being the one series of the bunch above that gets renewed for the 2014-15 season. It’s got Marvel clout behind it and some name recognition with Clark Gregg as Coulson too. Heck, I’d watch Gregg read the phone book. Visit me online at DangerousUniverse.com.

2013/14 TV Preview – Returning Shows

Over the last few years the TV season has gone one where shows premier in fall to a fall/winter one to now series premiering fall/winter/spring with a handful in the summer. So it’s not really a “TV season” anymore, it’s new TV all the time.

It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia (FXX) September 4

Always-Sunny-Philadelphia-29
It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia

Sunny enters its ninth season, yes NINTH season, on a new “edgier” network called FXX but is feeling a bit tired these days. While I don’t think anyone would argue that Sunny was as good the last few seasons as it was the first few, I’ll still check this one out – for a few episodes at least.

The League (FXX) September 4
See above, except substitute “fourth” for “ninth.”

American Horror Story (FX) October 9

The first season of American Horror Story was amazing, it was easily one of the best shows in recent memory. The second season, let’s just say that the second season started out disastrous but ended up…interesting? Here’s hoping that the third season of American Horror will be more like the first than the second.

Raising Hope
Raising Hope

The Walking Dead (AMC) October 13
Watching The Walking Dead can be a grind. Sometimes it’s a satisfying grind, but a lot of times watching the show is a slog to get through the episodes where little happens to ones where stuff does happen. I get the feeling that if each season of TWD were six or eight episodes long it would be a much tighter series rather than what we got with the last 16 episode season that felt like a lot of filler.

Raising Hope (FOX) Fridays “Late Fall”

Raising Hope enters its fourth season after having seemingly been on the  verge of cancellation for all four of those seasons. The comedy, once a staple of Fox’s Tuesday nights, has now been relegated to Friday nights. Regardless of what night it airs on, I’m a sucker for Raising Hope and the whole Chance family.

Doctor Who
Doctor Who

Doctor Who (BBC America) Christmas

The final season of Doctor Who with lead Matt Smith starts right where the last one ended, with John Hurt (Alien) being introduced as a connection to the Doctor’s past.

Sometime after the new year

The Americans (FX)

The Americans
The Americans

The more I think about The Americans, the more I miss this show about Soviet sleeper agents operating in the early 1980s in Washington DC. I think where this series works is that it’s also about the home lives of the Soviets as well as all the other secret agent action stuff.

Community (NBC)

Dan Harmon is back as the creative head of Community for one more season, the last of the series. Will Harmon usher Community back to greatness, or will it be a misstep that critics will be talking about for years to come? Regardless, I’ll be watching!

Game of Thrones (HBO)
The fourth season is usually when genera series begin faltering; see Lost, The X-Files, Battlestar Galactica, et al. It’ll be interesting to see if Game of Thrones is able to buck this trend.

Hannibal (NBC)

Hannibal
Hannibal

I feel like there are about 10 of us out there watching Hannibal on NBC. I’m guessing it’s one of those shows where people will discover it long after it’s gone and wonder why more people didn’t watch it when it was first on? It’s brilliant!

Mad Men (AMC)
Is the upcoming season of Mad Men the last season of the series, or does Mad Men creator Matt Weiner have more seasons of the show in mind? Only time will tell.