Oversharing @ Jeffrey's World

15Jul/110

Working on an exciting project

As I sit here, basking in the glow of my computer screen, munching on Edamame, it's time to reflect on the past two weeks. It's been a busy time, with the start of my summer classes, and I've had little time to pause and write. I've posted to Twitter, Facebook, and the new Google+ account I've started, but those have all been fairly quick hits, and most of the writing that I've been doing in that time has been for my classes.

This summer, I'm taking two classes: History 300B, Historical Writing, and History 394, American Civil War. As a History major, there's a lot of writing involved, and these classes are certainly no exception, as there have already been four major writing assignments in the two weeks of class, and in the case of my 300B class, all of these assignments are working toward a final paper, which will be 15 pages long on a topic of our choice; in fact, this weekend I'll be working on another paper for that class: a five-to-six-page assignment, summarizing my goals and sources for the final paper in proposal form.

Dr. Fredric Wertham, photo from seductionoftheinnocent.org

The class has been given the framework of "crime and punishment" to work within for our papers, and my professor was very interested in my desire to write a paper about the Anti-Comics crusade of the mid-1950s. I was surprised to discover that there has actually been very little secondary scholarship written on the topic, nearly all of which has been published within the past decade, and few people that I've spoken to were even aware that it ever took place. Given the fact that it involved book burnings, Congressional hearings, and events that nearly caused the destruction of the entire comic book industry, I found this surprising.

Since there has been so little secondary scholarship on the subject, my professor waived the requirement that I have 8-10 secondary sources and a single primary source, particularly in light of the fact that I'm using nearly two dozen primary sources and four or five secondary sources. Unlike my peers in the class, much of the onus of synthesizing the information is on me, rather than a more recent source to which I can refer. Based solely on my verbal accounts of my progress and my existing knowledge of the subject, however, even before I've written the proposal, I've already been urged to submit the final paper for publication in the department's annual journal of student research papers.

Stan Lee

Stan Lee, photo from bleedingcool.com

I'm excited for the opportunity, and have spent a great deal of time over the past two weeks in the library, where I've been researching the events. I'm even attempting to get into contact with Stan Lee for a firsthand account of the events of the era, as he was working as a writer for Timely Comics (which would later become Marvel Comics) in the 1940s and 50s, and I feel the perspective of a man who has spent nearly seven decades working in the comics industry would be an invaluable addition to my work.

The Anti-Comics Crusade was a seminal point in the history of American comic books, as it led to the creation of the Comics Code Authority, a form of self-censorship that crippled the industry just as it was beginning to grow. The events that led to that were tumultuous and exciting, and I hope that my paper will do them justice.

30Jun/110

These are a few of my favorite things

Oshkosh, Wisconsin. 1984. I’m six (“and a half!”) years old, and this is the year I would discover some seriously cool stuff: Transformers and G.I. Joe. While G.I. Joe had debuted two years earlier, and my older brother, Kevin, doubtless had some of the toys, I didn’t really notice that stuff until after I’d turned six. At this point, I was beginning to become one of the “big kids,” and my tastes in toys reflected that. The fact that, a year later in 1985, both toy lines would have TV shows – which were, really, little better than half-hour-long daily commercials for said toys – certainly aided in my discovery. That year also saw the release of a new cartoon in the U.S.: Robotech, and by 1986, I’d also discovered Voltron, another Japanese import. Add these to my existing love of the Star Wars toys, and I’m shocked my mother was able to refrain from causing physical harm to myself or my brother whenever we happened to pass a toy aisle when we’d go shopping.

25Jul/090

Twitter Weekly Updates for 2009-07-25

  • Spent 5 hours working on an English paper with my group, but it's done now. #
  • Marvel Movie Marathon: watching Marvel Comics movies in chrono order. Blade & X-Men down; watching Blade II. Spider-Man & Daredevil up next #
  • @gadgetdoll Having some trouble? #
  • OK, we've got Ryan Reynolds as Hal Jordan/Green Lantern... My vote goes for Willem Defoe as Sinestro! #
  • Watched the first 5 movies in my Marvel Marathon, spanning 1998-2002; after midnight, calling it a night. Probably watch some more tomorrow #
  • Figures. The college dropped phone registration this year, going web-only... and the server crashed from everyone trying to register at once #
  • Need to head to school soon... supposed to have an in-class essay today or tomorrow, & a final on Thursday. Speech class ends next week. #
  • @BrentSpiner I'd verify my account if it gave me the option. I'm the Harlander... There Can Be Only ONE! #
  • @BrentSpiner how can you be sure Harlander isn't my real name? #
  • Four more days of English class... starting in 30 minutes. #
  • Talked to VA rep on campus; got hold put on my acct so I don't get dropped from fall classes before new GI Bill takes effect. W00t! #
  • @wilw Hopefully that's an indication of how small a percentage of hoax believers are in the population at large... #
  • Had a very strange dream. In it, I was reading a book. It wasn't even a very good one. #
  • @COEDMagazine Never understood how one can "discover" place w/ pop in millions. It's like putting a flag in my yard & claiming it for Spain in reply to COEDMagazine #
  • Finished the 1st of 2 in-class essays. Get it back at 4. It's basically the rough draft for the big essay due tomorrow #
  • WTF? DHS thinks a strategy guide for a game about giant monsters is a threat to national security?! http://tinyurl.com/kraybk #
  • Got an A on my in-class essay today. Got another on Thursday for the final, plus a persuasive speech for my Speech final next week... #
  • WTF? Hit with overdraft fees on an acct that wasn't, which caused it to become so, thus more fees... $175 in fees, my balance is now -$150 #
  • Used coupon for $1 lunch at kfc. Can hear girl getting job interview. BS detector going off scale #
  • English final today. Final essay finished, ready to turn in. Need to pick up a blue book before class though. #
  • @BrentSpiner One more reason I should be like Brent. He's got so many assistants. Guten Morgen, Ernst. #
  • Finished my English final. Gonna get some lunch and prepare for speech class in 3 hours... That one doesn't end until Wednesday. #
  • Think I did well on English final but bombed my speech. I can do some extra credit but my grade's still going to suffer #

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16Jul/090

Zombies in Pop Culture

For the midterm in my Speech class, we were required to give an 8-minute informative speech on a topic of our choice, and were urged to pick unusual topics. Naturally, I picked zombies, and eventually presented a history of zombies in pop culture. Here's the outline of my speech.

21Aug/060

It’s a bird! It’s a plane!

Your results:
You are Superman

Superman
80%
Spider-Man
75%
Robin
65%
Green Lantern
65%
Hulk
65%
Iron Man
50%
The Flash
50%
Supergirl
48%
Batman
45%
Catwoman
40%
Wonder Woman
33%
You are mild-mannered, good,
strong and you love to help others.


Click here to take the Superhero Personality Test

6Jun/060

X-Men: Apocalypse Rising

Main characters: Wolverine, Storm, Phoenix, Havok, Colossus, Iceman, Shadowcat
Villains: Apocalypse, Mr. Sinister
Secondary characters: Rogue, Gambit, Angel, Xavier, Magneto

Plot overview:

5Jun/060

Untitled X-Men 3 Sequel

I was inspired to write this after watching X3 this weekend. Spoilers for X3 for those of you out there who haven't seen it yet...

20May/060

More old blog entries

Here's my blog entries from MySpace...

3Jul/990

Wizard magazine libels NRA

Wizard "UnderCovers"My copy of Wizard: The Comics Magazine lay waiting on my bed for me when I returned home from work on the night of July 1, 1999. Eagerly, I opened the plastic wrapper used to ship the magazine and its assorted goodies through the postal system.

Since discovering the publication while in middle school, I have eagerly and faithfully anticipated each succeeding issue. Even if I wasn't able to afford to buy it in the past, I would read it on the newsstand. Missed issues became a lost concern upon ordering a subscription in college.

After seeing the cartoon (at right) of Krusty the Clown -- with the caption denigrating the National Rifle Association provided by the Wizard staff -- in the price guide section, I was outraged.

I quickly set to work writing a letter expressing my dismay at their lack of professionalism and mailed it off the next morning. Time will tell if it is published -- or if an apology is made -- or not.

The letter is published below:

Dear Magic Words,

Never before have I been so appalled by the comments made in your publication as I was after reading the anti-NRA comment on page 170 of the August 1999 issue.

Ever since I first discovered Wizard magazine in 1993, I have eagerly awaited the next issue, reading each cover to cover. You are the leading news publication in the comics industry. That gives you great power and, as we have learned from the pages of Spider-Man, with great power comes great responsibility.

You are journalists, specializing in the comic book industry, but journalists nonetheless. I understand how that field operates, being a copy editor for a major newspaper group in Southern California, and therefore a journalist myself.

What this boils down to is ethics. A picture of Krusty the Clown preparing to fire a cannon containing the Simpson family with the caption, "The NRA Theme Park: Faaaaaaaaaaaantastic!" is, quite bluntly, libel. Yes, I said libel, committed against roughly 70 million law-abiding gun owners in general and over 3 million NRA members in particular.

Contrary to the stereotype painted in today's media, of which I am, at times, ashamed to be a member, the NRA is not a group of beer-swilling rednecks with more ammunition than brain cells. The NRA is composed of Americans from all walks of life, including students, teachers, doctors, astronauts, members of the armed services, police officers, several former U.S. presidents and, yes, even journalists.

To quote current NRA President Charlton Heston, "we [the NRA] condemn and fight gun recklessness or misuse in all its forms, just as we fight gun crime. And in our own use of firearms, we seek to serve as models of good judgement and personal responsibility." I very often wish the mass media were able to make a similar statement of intent.

Even if you don't print this letter, even if you don't print an apology to the millions of NRA members you have slandered, at the very least exercise better judgement in the future and do some research before denigrating an entire segment of the American people.

Very sincerely,

Jeffrey Rodgers
Fullerton, California