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dorothydalmati1 · 4 months
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American Dad! Season 2 Episode 8: Star Trek
Written by Chris McKenna & Matt McKenna
Storyboard by Aldin Baroza, Shawn Murray & Scott Wood
Directed by Mike Kim
Directing assistance by Jim Shellhorn
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constantinho · 8 months
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Cringe culture is dead, have an Arcane OC/self-insert picrew chain:
The link: https://picrew.me/ja/image_maker/610761
(Copy and paste the link or search for MY DOLL MAKER by @seep_999 on picrew.me)
My character:
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>Name: Vincent Baroza Rhamus
>Gender: trans male, he/him
>Age: 23 at the first act of the series, 28 at the second and third act (around 2 years younger than Jayce and Viktor, probably)
>Sexuality: Homosexual
>Physical health: [80/100] A bit underweight and struggles with some body pain
>Mental health: [65/100] Needs to take medicine to control his anxiety disorder, has self-steem issues
>Occupation: Inventor
>Related characters:
Jayce [friend] [assistant] (likes)
Viktor [friend?] [romantic interest] (likes)
Heimendinger [student] (neutral at first act, begins to dislike at second act)
Mel Medarda [acquaintance] (neutral but doesn't like being near her, she makes him anxious)
Sky Young [friend] (likes)
>Info: Even tho Vincent's parents are Zaunites, he was born and raised on Piltover: his father managed to gather some wealth and privilages by becoming an informant to the enforcers on Zaun's criminals and rebels. When Vincent was only 15, his father was recognized during an undercover mission in Zaun and killed by one Vander's men. As an attempt to keep the familys wealth, he alongside with his mother (who worked as a mechanical specialized on the machinery of locomotives) started various projects and sold them to rich enterprenaurs who then presented them to the grand public. But Vincent started getting tired of not being recognized for his work, so at 19 he ingressed on Piltover's Academy to make his name. At 23 he became Jayce's assistant (much to Viktor's dislike) and at 27 he managed to finalize his biggest invention, the mechanical angel: a set of wings that are able to fly only using gears, made with the pourpose of assisting people with trouble walking, or that work at high altitudes. He disagrees with the council's decision to make his invention a tool for enforcers, becoming closer to Viktor due to their mutual dislike of the way things are being handled on Piltover.
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#onthisdayinagainstthegrainhistory 9/8/17 Goldnwolf @ baroza #goldnwolf #prettyawkward #baroza #seattle #concertphotography #band #music #concert #tour #againstthegrainphotography (at Barboza) https://www.instagram.com/p/CE5Jxh6pEQP/?igshid=hj2ilmbzi86l
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lestatslestits · 4 years
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My list of every piece of Phantom media and Phantom related project I’ve watched or read. If anyone has suggestions for adaptations I should check out, let me know! I’m gonna try to make a list of versions to check off as I go.
For film adaptations I have listed the actor who plays The Phantom. For stage adaptations I have listed the original actor for that production/text. For book adaptations I have listed the author.
The Phantom of the Opera (1911, english publication date) - Gaston Leroux
The Phantom of Opera (1925) - Lon Chaney
The Phantom of the Opera (1943) - Claude Raines
The Phantom of the Paradise (1974) - William Finley
The Phantom of the Opera (1983) - Maximilian Schell
The Phantom of the Opera (1986) - Michael Crawford, etc.
The Phantom of the Opera (1987) - Aiden Grennell (Animated film)
The Phantom of the Opera (1989) - Robert Englund
The Phantom of the Mall: Eric’s Revenge (1989) - Derek Rydall
The Phantom of the Opera (1990) - Charles Dance
The Phantom of the Opera (1991) - David Staller
The Phantom of the Opera (1991) - Richard White, etc.
Phantom (1991) - Susan Kay
The Phantom of the Opera (1992) - Braxton Peters (Toby’s Dinner Theatre)
The Canary Trainer (1993) - Nicholas Meyer
The Angel of the Opera (1994) - Sam Siciliano
Sherlock Holmes: Adventures of the Opera Ghost (1994) - Steven P. Jones and Aldin Baroza
Wishbone: Pantin’ at the Opera (1995) - Kevin Page
Maskerade (1995) - Terry Pratchett
Bantam of the Opera (1997) - Mary Jane Auch
Phantoms Don’t Drive Sports Cars (1998) - Debbie Dadey and Marcia Thornton Jones
The Phantom of Manhattan (1999) - Frederick Forsyth
The Phantom of the Opera (2004) - Gerard Butler
The Trap-Door Maker (2006) - Pete Bregman
Angel of Music (2009) - Doug Kisgen
Love Never Dies (2010) - Ramin Karimloo
Frankenstein Makes a Sandwich (2010) - Adam Rex
A Monster in Paris (2011) - Sean Lennon
Rendezvous at the Populaire (2011) - Kate Workman
I Will Find the Answer (2011) - Kate Workman
Love Never Dies (2012) - Ben Lewis
Christine (2016) - Marie Piper
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worldmusicmethod · 3 years
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Learn African Guitar Online | Online Samba Lessons Online
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develop expert knowledge Master The African Guitar
why should i learn Congolese Music?
In the last part of the 1950s and mid-1960s, artists in the Congo wove together a rainbow of impacts – Cuban music, jazz, French variété, American pop, conventional ancestral music – and made Congolese rumba
Guitarists like Nicolas 'Dr Nico' Kasanda,Cuban Guitar Lessons,  Online Samba Lessons,  Learn Brazilian Guitar Antoine 'Tino Baroza' Tshilumba, and the incomparable 'Franco' Luambo Makiadi made a totally different guitar language – cadenced, melodic, mesmerizing – that progressively started spreading the nation over and then some.
the magic of sebene A Masterclass In Congolese Guitar :
All through the course, Niwel Tsumbu takes some renowned lines by Congolese guitar saints like Roxy Tshimpaka and Beniko Popolipo from Zaiko Langa, and Alain Makaba from Wenge Musica, and separates them into edible pieces, clarifying the essential 1-5-4-5 harmony movement and key stretches on which the sebene style is fabricated.
Though most African guitar styles depend on riffs and a restricted scope of notes, the Congolese peaceful style utilizes the whole fretboard, delighting in complex chromatic jumps and octave runs. This complexity is somewhat because of the impact of certain US jazz guitar greats, most eminently Wes Montgomery, whose octave style established a colossal connection with youthful Congolese guitarists in the last part of the 1960s and 1970s. Yet, it additionally originates from crafted by a couple of edified Belgian evangelists and guitarists who advanced and showed the instrument during the 1950s and mid-1960s, particularly Bill Alexandre, a jazz guitarist who was once in Django Reinhardt's band.
learn online with Soukous Guitar Tutorials :
At the point when Niwel was experiencing childhood in Kinshasa, he was wild about music. So were his companions. In any case, it wasn't such a lot of the jokes of well known vocalists, the most recent tune or racy verse that ruled the discussion; it was the 'lines'. All in all, the guitar lines. "Have you heard the lines on the new Choc Stars collection?" one fan may say to another. "Better believe it, Roxy Tshimpaka's been doing something amazing once more," his companion answers. "Also, Beniko has even begun to grin!"
"It's their lines that sold the collections," Niwel says. "They were more famous than the vocals. Those guitarists, Popolipo, Roxy, they resembled divine beings!" If Congolese sebene turned into the most mainstream dance style in present day African history, it's gratitude to the virtuoso of its guitarists.
visit site : https://worldmusicmethod.com/
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obuxixo · 3 years
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Artur Mazurek grava e lança nova versão da música “Caso indefinido”
Artur Mazurek grava e lança nova versão da música “Caso indefinido”
Nesta sexta-feira (23), o cantor Artur Mazurek lança para todo o Brasil a nova versão da música “Caso indefinido”, grande sucesso e eternizado na voz do saudoso Cristiano Araújo. A produção musical é de Diego Baroza, da Nash Studio. O single ganhou um lindo clipe que contou com a interpretação do próprio Artur Mazurek e da atriz Eduarda Alcova. A direção de vídeo é da Punto Aureo. A faixa já está…
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songkokid · 4 years
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Daftar Isi Simthudduror Daftar Isi Maulid Simthudduror Muqoddimah Alhamdulillahil Qowiyyi Tajallal Haqqu Wa Asyhadu Amma Ba'du Waqod Aana Wamungdzu 'Aliqot Fahiina Qoruba Mahallul Qiyam Wahiina Baroza Tsumma Innahu Fanasya-a Tsumma Innahu Ba'da Waminasy Syarofi Wahaitsu Walaqodittashofa Doa Maulid
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alqeadias-blog1 · 7 years
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Rejection Therapy
This week, we were tasked to do a "rejection therapy" Where we had to communicate and ask random strangers about anything that will result with "NO" as an answer. However if we get to turn their "no" into a "yes", additional merrit will be given.
Me together with my partner, Wenna Baroza have gone to Limketkai Mall to do what we were tasked to do. We asked a couple of people i for instance asked a crew Jollibee if i'm their Mcfloat is available and insisted on buying it instead of their equivalebt product, the coke float. Which resulted to a big no. Next, i came up to a loading station and asked to purchase 25 Php worth of cellphone load. Total charge was 27 pesos but I told them to pay 20 pesos and just give the remaining balance (7 php) after i get my stuff from the baggace counter. I got a "no" but it eventually turned to a "yes" after i've offered to leave my ID as collateral until i returned.
All in all, this rejection therapy is really good for us starters to be able to cope up with rejection during interview or exhibits of our future products/projects.
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dorothydalmati1 · 3 months
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American Dad! Season 4 Episode 1: The Vacation Goo
Written by Josh Bycel & Jonathan Fener
Storyboard by Aldin Baroza, Josue Cervantes & Paul Lee
Directed by Albert Calleros
Animation directed by Dong-Young Lee
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alvadee · 7 years
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Sherlock Holmes- Adventure of the Opera Ghost
written by Steve Jones, illustrated by Aldin Baroza   (part 1)
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yekoz · 6 years
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How Baroza eluded arrest
See on Scoop.it - UgandaNuz
Uganda’s ambassador to Algeria accuses police of bungling arrest
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mediatedlives-blog · 6 years
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Not All Web Series Are Created Equal
by Amalia Culpepper-Wehr
Wikipedia defines a web series with no uncertain terms: “a series of scripted or non-scripted videos, generally in episodic form, released on the Internet.” (“Web Series”). They are often seen as lower-quality than “real” television due to low budgets for their production. Web series, as stated in a Verge article, act like a television show’s pilot or audition (Liao).
Web series are occasionally brought into the spotlight when one is picked up by a network and ascends to become Real TV. When HBO picked up Misadventures of Awkward Black Girl and Brown Girls, it was a joyous moment. Finally the small screen would represent women who lived, laughed, loved, and cried just like a rarely acknowledged “us”: Black and brown women.
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Web television doesn’t just appeal to underserved audiences. Everyone loves web series - just look at Netflix’s Stranger Things. Yet if someone suggested that Stranger Things was a web series, it would be met with scorn, despite it following web series conventions - short seasons (8 episodes a piece) with episodes whose run times don’t fit into traditional television time slots (around one hour per episode, although most web series run short rather than long). The idea that Stranger Things must prove its worth through a TV time slot is ridiculous - it’s high budget and has Winona Ryder.
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But the stigma around web series can’t be bypassed by a shiny budget and brand names. In fact, these very brands may uphold it. Runaways is a Hulu original web series produced by Marvel, which has recently been renewed for a second season. Of its six main characters, four are people of color, and the storyline includes an explicit lesbian romance (Pullian-Moore). Meanwhile, Agents of SHIELD, Marvel’s largest TV show (spanning five seasons on ABC, it has been renewed for a sixth), contains nine main white characters out of its ensemble of thirteen (Baroza). Among them, everyone is straight.  
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Why then does Marvel shove its diverse stories aside? Disney, which owns Marvel, also owns ABC (Carpenter). The company could just as easily put Runaways on the air as it could the all-white, badly-received Inhumans. It’s no coincidence that the MCU’s first queer romance premiered on the Internet while SHIELD’s sixth season will promote a brand-new white character to series regular. 
Sources: 
"Web Series." Wikipedia, en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Web_series. Accessed 22 July     2018. 
Pulliam-Moore, Charles. "Marvel's Runaways Just Proved How Easy It Is to Include     Queer Characters." io9, 13 Dec. 2017, io9.gizmodo.com/     marvels-runaways-just-proved-how-easy-it-is-to-include-1821229609. Accessed     22 July 2018. 
Liao, Shannon. "In 2017, the Web Series May Be the New TV Pilot." The Verge,     www.theverge.com/2017/10/27/16145498/     insecure-broad-city-high-maintenance-web-series-hbo-comedy-central.     Accessed 22 July 2018. 
Carpenter, J. William. "Top 5 Company Owned by Disney." Investopedia, 20 June     2018, www.investopedia.com/articles/markets/102915/     top-5-companies-owned-disney.asp. Accessed 22 July 2018. 
Baroza, A.L. "What’s the Deal with the POC Characters on Agents of     S.H.I.E.L.D.?" The Nerds of Color, 31 Mar. 2015, thenerdsofcolor.org/2015/     03/31/whats-the-deal-with-the-poc-characters-on-agents-of-s-h-i-e-l-d/.     Accessed 22 July 2018.
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worldnewsph · 6 years
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SSS offers loan restructuring to past-due accounts of members
SSS offers loan restructuring to past-due accounts of members
  SSS Maasin Branch Manager Gregorio S. Baroza explaining the LRP. (rgc/PIA8-So.Leyte)
MAASIN CITY, July 6 (PIA) — The Social Security System (SSS) has offered the Loan Restructuring Program (LRP) for those members who had past due loans with the agency, Maasin Branch Manager Gregorio S. Baroza said in his opening statement during the SSS “Sulit na Sulit” advocacy campaign held recently in Maasin…
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khalilhumam · 6 years
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Uganda:Gen Kayihura Aide Baroza On the Run
New Post has been published on http://khalilhumam.com/feed-items/ugandagen-kayihura-aide-baroza-on-the-run/
Uganda:Gen Kayihura Aide Baroza On the Run
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lestatslestits · 5 years
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Phantom of the Opera/Sherlock Holmes Crossover Masterpost
@wheel-of-fish and @jennyfair7 requested a master post of all of the Sherlock Holmes and Phantom of the Opera crossovers that I know of, so after a few days of compiling, here it is! These books range from the (fairly) well known to the rather obsessively obscure, and include any books I know of where the Holmes and Phantom universes overlap. I’ve taken this as a chance to review the ones I’ve read, and I’ll hopefully be able to update this post with more info on the others once I finish them. All opinions expressed in this post are my own.
Note: this is only a list of crossovers published and available for purchase, and of which I am aware. If anyone else knows of more, please let me know!
The Angel of the Opera by Sam Siciliano
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This is the first Phantom/Sherlock crossover I ever read. For me it’s a bit hit or miss. The author decided to forgo including Watson, and instead included a character named Doctor Henry Vernier, a cousin of Holmes’, as the narrator. I believe that Henry Vernier is most likely a reference to Doctor Verner, Holmes’ cousin who ended up buying Watson’s medical practice after the death of Mary Watson. Which is to say, it’s a book written by a person who seemingly remembered a single line from a single Sherlock Holmes story about Holmes having a physician cousin named Verner (presumably made into Vernier for the purposes of the book’s French setting, and to reflect Holmes’ French heritage), but still managed to confuse the Grasshopper and the Scorpion, and occasionally spell Erik as “Eric.” It makes some sense, though, as Siciliano is mostly a Sherlockian, with several other pastiches under his belt. For my money, he’s not my favorite interpreter of Holmes as a character, although it could be that his choice of narrators impacts how Holmes is portrayed. Although it does tend to fall into some Phantom-centric tropes that I don’t care for, overall The Angel of the Opera is long enough to flesh out the story more fully than some Holmes/Phantom crossovers manage, and in general the style feels consistent with what you would expect from a Holmes story. It absolutely pulled me in when I read it at a young age, and I’m hoping to have the chance to revisit it soon.
The Canary Trainer by Nicholas Meyer
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The Canary Trainer is the second book (chronologically) in a trio of Holmes novels that take place during The Great Hiatus, the years between “The Final Problem” and “The Empty House,” during which time Holmes is assumed dead. The first book, The Seven-Per-Cent Solution, involves Holmes meeting Sigmund Freud and undergoing psychotherapy to cope with his drug addiction. The Canary Trainer finds Holmes in France, taking a violinist position at the Opera House and coming face to face (so to speak) with Erik. Nicholas Meyer is perhaps best known for directing Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan. The Seven-Per-Cent Solution is a well-known Holmes pastiche (which I will admit I’ve never read). The Canary Trainer is a bit more obscure.
The Canary Trainer takes on a lot of cool concepts (a story that takes place during The Great Hiatus, perspective on Erik’s time as an architect and builder, etc.), but it also makes a lot of baffling choices, such as having Gaston Leroux show up as a character, and including Irene Adler only to under-utilize her as little more than a love interest for Holmes (her lukewarm friendship with Christine is one of the most disappointing parts of the book, in my opinion). It also barely allows Erik and Holmes to interact. Erik is such a profoundly sympathetic antagonist and Holmes is capable of such extreme empathy that it’s a shame to not let them engage with each other.
Rendezvous at the Populaire and I Will Find the Answer by Kate Workman
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While most Holmes/Phantom crossovers focus on Leroux’s novel, Rendezvous at the Populaire, as its name suggests, pulls heavily from the Andrew Lloyd Webber musical. So heavily, in fact, that a major chunk of the dialogue and descriptions comes directly from lyrics, which can be distracting. Stylistically, Rendezvous at the Populaire reads differently than your typical Holmes pastiche, drawing from multiple points of view instead of one narrator. It can feel rather rough around the edges, but I ultimately found it a fun read. It’s nice to read a crossover that features Watson, and Holmes and Erik have a nice dynamic. This book prompted a sequel, I Will Find the Answer, in which Holmes, Watson, and Erik join forces to solve the Strange Case of Doctor Jekyll and Mister Hyde. In the same way that Rendezvous at the Populaire draws primarily from the Andrew Lloyd Webber musical, I Will Find the Answer draws more heavily from Jekyll and Hyde than from Robert Louis Stevenson’s book. Workman’s style progresses nicely between books, making I Will Find the Answer a bit easier of a read, less reliant on song lyrics for its text. If she ever decides to publish her proposed third book featuring Holmes and Erik solving the Jack the Ripper murders, I’ll be interested to read it.
Sherlock Holmes: The Adventure of the Opera Ghost by Steven Philip Jones and Aldin Baroza
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This is two part comic is part of a series pitting Holmes against various gothic literary icons and monsters. It draws heavily from Leroux and Kay. The comic takes place after The Great Hiatus and the death of Mary Watson. The story had to be pretty heavily condensed to fit the two issue format, but it accomplishes a lot in a short space, hitting high points in the story. There is a subplot that heavily focuses on Watson mourning Mary’s death, which leads to a unique twist on the end of the story. The art style is cool and has a nice vintage black and white look. I would love to see this concept extended into a longer series, but as it stands it’s a nice, quick read. Due to its brevity it does get a little confusing at times, including a point where Mary appears to call Watson “James” instead of John (although it’s hard to fault the comics for a mistake Doyle himself occasionally made), but it’s a lot of fun and definitely worth checking out.
Angels of Music by Kim Newman
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This is a crossover that breaks the mold! Instead of pitting Holmes against Erik, this book features Irene Adler (among other fictional woman, including Christine Daaé and some of Newman’s own characters from other books) working with Erik as a sort of spy. It’s Charlie’s Angels by way of The Phantom of the Opera, and I’m only a few pages into it, but I’m certainly excited to read more. In some ways Irene Adler is a more natural fit into Phantom than Holmes himself is, so I’m always interested to find crossovers that include her. I’ll likely update this post once I’ve finished the book.
The Phantom of the Opera Carmen by Regina Goncalves
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I had to do a lot of digging to find any information about this book and I’m still not entirely sure what it’s about, but I wanted to include it for the sake of thoroughness. Hopefully I’ll be able to read it and provide an update later.
The Phantom of the Opera Carmen is one story in a series of educational books for young readers. The stories focus on a time traveler named Caius Zip who travels and learns about the connection between art and science. This story features Caius teaming up with Sherlock Holmes and H.G. Wells to solve the mystery of our favorite ghost while the opera house attempts to mount a production of Carmen. There also seems to be a story about Caius and Sherlock meeting some of the masters of Impressionism and learning about their art. How, if at all, this ties in with the Phantom plot isn’t clear. This book is on my list once I finish Angels of Music, so I hope to be able to report back later.
Sherlock Holmes contro il Fantasma dell’Opera by Antonella Mecenero
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 Sherlock Holmes contro il Fantasma dell’Opera is an e-book short story/novella in which Sherlock Holmes once again takes a position as a violinist at the opera house in order to solve the mystery of the Phantom. I know very little about this book as it exclusively available in Italian, which I don’t read or speak. Special thanks to @letyourfantasiesunwind1981 for pointing out this story to me!
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333mots · 7 years
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 (sSecret Identities. The Asian American Superhero Anthology éd. par Jeff Yang, Parry Shen, Keith Chow et Jerry Ma (New York, 2009)
Contributions de qualité très variable: il y a beaucoup d’histoires avec une bonne idée de base, mais le développement est inutilement compliqué; je ne reprends que ce que j’ai aimé:
- Jeff Yang (s), Jef Castro (d), Preface: In the Beginning:  fait bien le boulot; j’aime beaucoup la fausse couverture du comics: The Y-Men, the lamest stupor-zeroes of All !
- Tak Toyoshima (http://www.secretasianman.com/), S.A.M. meets Larry Hama (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Larry_Hama) réflexions sur la nécessité ou non que des auteurs d’origine asiatique écrivent des histoires de personnages d’origine asiatique
- Jonathan Tsuei (s), Jerry Ma (https://www.epicprops.com/) (d), 9066: un superhéros nisei est envoyé dans un camp d’internement et renié par ses anciens amis superhéros
- Keith Chow (s), A.L. Baroza (d), Re-directing Comics: Greg Pak: courtes mais intéressantes réflexions sur les origines des superhéros et ce qu’elles ajoutent à la construction de leur identité; dessin intéressant (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greg_Pak)
- Greg Pak (http://gregpak.com/) (s), Bernard Chang (http://bernardchang.com/index.html) (d), The Citizen: humour à deux balles, cameo d’Obama
- Keith Chow (s), A.L. Baroza (d), Sidekicks: Gene Yang & Michael Kang: voir ci-dessus
- Gene Yang, Sonny Liew, The Blue Scorpion & Chung: comique et bien dessiné
- Michael Kang (https://www.facebook.com/KANGisMAN) (s), Erwin Haya (d) (http://www.iamosi.com/), James: un peu lourd, mais dessin amusant
- Tanuj Chopra (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tanuj_Chopra) (s), Alex Joon Kim (d), S.O.S.: utilisation amusante du thème des call center en Inde; dessin plus relâché que le reste du livre
- Hellen Jo (http://helllllen.org/), Supergrrrls: petite discussion sur femmes dans comics
- Ian Kim, Character: Flight
- Leonardo Nam (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leonardo_Nam), Anthony Tam, Ruben De Vela (https://rubendevela.deviantart.com/), Character: Shine
- Anthony Wu (http://anthonygoes.tumblr.com/), Character: Parallel Penny (nice idea about adoption and gender selection at birth)
- Nick Huang (s), Alexander Shen (d), Just Ordinary: un peu complique, mais le héros est prof assistant de littérature comparée le jour et sa vie de famille est importante pour lui
- Koji Steven Sakai (s), John Franzese (d), Meet Joe: pour le dessin original et l’humour sur la modestie asiatique
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