Webcomics Weekend tickets now on sale!

Tickets have just gone on sale for the second annual New England Webcomics Weekend comics festival in Easthampton, Massachusetts! Organized by my friend and colleague Meredith Gran and her army of trusty flying monkeys, NEWW is a one-of-a-kind gathering of people who make online comics and other people who would like to hang out with those first people. And vice versa! This year it’s being held November 6-7, taking advantage of the lovely New England autumn.

Tickets are limited and are expected to sell out before the show, so if you’re in the New England area (or within teleportation distance) and a fan of webcomics, this is a great event — it’s social, friendly, a great space for conversation without the high stress of a massive convention, and Kris Straub and I will be doing a live Tweet Me Harder comedy show. What could be better?

Earlier this year, it was a bit weird mentioning my trips to ROFLCon and San Diego, because tickets for those events were long sold out by the time I brought them up. I’m attempting to rectify that this time!

Oh yeah and here is the amazing old factory building where NEWW is held — there is a stained brick room deep in its bowels called the Quarantine Area. What could be better, I maintain?

The Spelling Bee, and What Happened There

Over the weekend, Keith, Dave and I made our way to Lincoln Middle School in Santa Monica for 826LA‘s Spelling Bee for Cheaters! Thanks to your generous donations, we were able to raise over $1,700 for the tutoring center, and we learned that the entire event raised over $70,000 — 20K over their goal. Thrilling!

The judges of the bee were folks from the Broadway show The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee, and they styled the event to seem just like a traditional Scripps-Howard spelling bee that you might see obsessive kids win on PBS — with the exception that jokes were built into the format of the show. They advised each contestant to ask for a word’s definition and for it to be used in a sentence, and while the definition would be correct, the sentence would take the form of a joke. Here’s video of some of the celebrity contestants, if you’d like to see how it worked! They gave some of the celebrities deliberately easy words to advance them into the later rounds; the words for the regular contestants were quite difficult.

As I watched the other contestants compete, it was clear that this whole enterprise would be a gamble. I knew about one out of every eight words — oubliette, capybara, centavo and cystitis were some where I recall thinking “Dang, I wish I’d gotten that one” — but the rest of them were totally foreign to me. Luckily, our team had used the $1,700 we raised to buy cheats, including what basically amounted to a free pass to Round 2: a “Make Up Your Own Word” cheat.

Right before I was to go up, fellow contestant Jimmy Kimmel made a big show of tearing up his cheat coupons, proving that he was going it alone. When my turn came, I made a big show of gathering up his torn pieces and attempting to cash them in. It was no use! I was given a word so difficult that I didn’t even register it. I believe the definition indicated that it was an archaic term for a Siamese opium-den manservant, or something like that — I honestly could barely hear it (what with the echoey speakers) and knew at once that I would have to cash in the big cheat. I invented the word “blofax,” explaining that it was “a little-known spelling-bee rule wherein trophies are awarded to contestants based on handsomeness.” Fingers crossed! Thanks to the cheat, that word, as far as this bee was concerned anyway, was now canon.

Round Two went quicker, as most everyone had used a similar cheat in Round One and were now coming up empty. “Glee” star Dianna Agron (pictured above, in what is probably my first national-newswire editorial photo) was given the very difficult word “cow” in Round Two, but I was given a word in Yiddish that I had never heard before and probably had never met anyone who had ever heard it before. I am from California, you see.

I took a bold guess and ventured F-A-T-U-T-Z-E-D. It turned out to be FATOOTST. Ridiculous!

So, I was out. I sat back down in the audience with my teammates — I had been our team’s speller, and now that was it — and watched the rest of the bee. Ms. Agron performed respectably enough with the softballs that they threw her, and so lasted until a final face-off with a legitimate contestant who ended up taking home the grand prize (a giant dictionary signed by the celebrity participants). We had fun, got some cool McSweeney’s books to take home, and Dave & I even met a kind reader named Craig who recognized us in the audience. Hello, Craig!

Addendum: In preparing this post, I did an online search for photos of the event, and found that apparently people love this Dianna Agron. A million entertainment and gossip blogs reported on the spelling bee, and made much hay of Ms. Agron’s second-place win as an excuses to post picture after nearly-identical picture of her. This account in particular struck me as a bit funny:

Taking a break from work duties for a good cause, Dianna Agron partook in the “A Spelling Bee For Cheaters” benefit in Santa Monica, California on Saturday (August 14).

The “Glee” gal looked to be having a marvelous time as she greeted the kids at Lincoln Middle School while raising cash for the 826LA tutoring center.

Joining Dianna at the annual event were “The Office” actor John Krasinski, talk show host Jimmy Kimmel, director Spike Jonze and writer Dave Eggers.

As for the fundraising, all money went to support 826LA’s free writing and tutoring programs for Los Angeles students.

In truth, there weren’t really any kids at the event, nor was John Krasinski there (he’d planned to be, but didn’t show up). Someone wrote an article from a press release!

Thanks again for your kind support of the cause, and if you’re interested in getting involved with 826’s tutoring programs, there are chapters in San Francisco, NYC, Chicago, LA, Boston, Michigan and Seattle. Update: And DC! I’m planning on volunteering this fall myself! I am also planning on building a snowmobile from old tin cans and motorcycle parts. Sometimes life involves a lot of varied, fundamentally incompatible plans. That is how progress is made.

These Are Their Stories

Seduction of stepson.
A woman falls to her death.
A killer has a foot fetish.
Young murder suspects.
A homeless man is a suspect.
Victim steps off a subway platform.
Subway commuter is mutilated.
A toy collector is accidentally shot.
A video-game player goes missing.
Olympic site selection committee.
Little black book.
An autopsy reveals foul play.
Fontana and Falco in the colorful world of horse racing.

These are all DirecTV synopses of individual episodes of Law & Order. Brandon Bird (creator of the above work and surely the most L&O-obsessed artist since Botticelli) has put together an art show where each contributor takes a synopsis, and creates a piece of art based around it.

Brandon sent me a list of about two hundred of these things and I about went insane.

Then I washed my face, stared hard into the mirror, and made a piece for the show.

The exhibition will be at Gallery Meltdown in L.A. beginning this Saturday, the 24th, and running through the 30th. I and many of the other artists will be at a reception on Wednesday the 28th!

From Brandon’s description of the show:

For twenty years, the heroes of “Law & Order” have navigated literally hundreds grotesque tragedies, moral quandries, and improbable crimes.

Each piece is an artist’s interpretation of a one-line episode summary from the DirecTV program guide. Like the series that inspired them, they are sometimes straightforward and sometimes offer a twist; sometimes they contain no easy answers, and sometimes they are just plain goofy.

“These are Their Stories” will run July 24 to July 30, 2010 at Gallery Meltdown, 7522 W. Sunset Blvd., Los Angeles, CA 90046.

Guys I have never even seen an episode of Law & Order but now I am in A GALLERY SHOW ABOUT IT

Signing! Book sale! COMIC-CON

ITEM ONE

Meredith Gran’s massive nationwide book tour is touching a tentacle to the slimy form of Los Angeles this week, and I’m pleased to join her this Thursday, the 15th, at the crazy-cool Secret Headquarters in Silverlake! I’ll have books and high-fives and basically anything you might want out of life, ever. Come say hello from 7-9 PM and here is a Facebook thing with maps and everything.

ITEM TWO

You know what I did last night? I looked at my many, overflowing bookshelves and said “It’s time to reintroduce some of these items into the ecosystem so other people can enjoy them too.” I own too many books — and while they’re all great, I always seem to be getting more of them and it’s creating space problems in my life. So this weekend, I am opening up my studio and having a book rummage sale with art books, novels, tons of comics and magazines, and again, free high-fives and loads of joy all around! Come check out my studio — I’ll be here Saturday and Sunday from 9AM-4PM and I promise you will find some pretty great books here. And you will spend like a dollar for them. I am doing this friends-of-the-library-style where a massive novel will cost you about as much as a cucumber. The address is: 1506 Abbot Kinney Blvd, Venice CA 90291. COME ON DOWN

ITEM THREE

NEXT WEEK is the SAN DIEGO COMIC-CON. I am going to be at booth 1231! That is super-easy to remember because it’s just 1-2-3 and then 1 again. You cannot forget a booth number so simple, which is great because everything at the Con conspires to capture your attention. This booth number, however, will be rooted so deep in your brain that even your lizard ancestors could find it, even while being distracted by a Jabba the Hutt made of LEGOs. I’ll be with TopatoCo and the sign will likely be very red. Again, a good color for attracting even lizards. SEE YOU THERE???

BONUS ITEM FOUR!!

As a present for reading this whole thing even if you are nowhere near California, I will give you a little taste of what it is like to be in California. I found the following thumbtacked to a tree.

(UPDATE: This image was accidentally deleted, and I no longer have the original to re-scan. It was an index card with a to-do list written on it. The list included “laundry”, “buy sports bras”, “cuddles”, and “buy Pliskin’s light.”)

At first I thought it might have been viral marketing for a beer called “Pliskin’s Light”, but I can’t find any evidence that such a thing exists. I only hope that whoever thumbtacked this to a tree didn’t come back, find the note missing, and go on to totally forget to empty the trash. I would feel bad.

WHAT’S GOING ON HERE? Why in the world was this thumbtacked to a tree? Suggestions in the comments!

Watch the livestream from Portland!

If you’re able to come to my free signing/performance in Portland on Wednesday the 23rd, I hope to see you there! But if not, you can also tune into the video livestream of our comedy show starting at 7:30 PM Pacific. (That’s tomorrow! Or maybe tonight, depending on when you read this. Or, you know, maybe yesterday.) You can also follow @tweethard for timely reminders of this sort of thing.

The streaming window will pop up at tweetmeharder.com right before the show. UPDATE: Tumblr is being cranky, but here is another link. The show normally runs about an hour, and it’ll be recorded for later viewing as well. HOORAY