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Strip 851, Volume 5, Page 94

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< Piro >

things reorganized a tad from here on

"moving things around"

Sunday - April 30, 2006

[Piro] - 17:45:00 - [link here]

I haven't done this in recent years, but while working through the sequence of the last few comics in the chapter, it dawned on me that comic 850 - "Dirty Dishes", was out of sequence. I needed to happen right after 843 - "He's a Fanboy", which would allow the Largo's little Engames story to flow much better. Complicating this desire to move this strip was all the guest strips and DPD stuff that happened right smack in the middle of them.

So, after moving that strip to its proper place, bunching the DPD and Guest strips together and having them fall in the break between the Anna Millers scene and Largo's story, everything should be in order. I placed a 'moved to' mark on the comics that moved (except for the Guest and DPDs where i just removed the comic number completely). THe rants are still in the same order, just the comic order changed. The only thing that seems kinda screwy about it are the dates, but i left those to reflect the actual day the comic was made.

You can review the changes by starting here and reading things in order.

For those of you who pay way too much attention to details, here's what changed:

850 became 844 (episode 85 became episode 83)
845 (guest strip) did not change
847 became 846 (DPD)
848 became 847 (Guest Strip)
849 became 848 (Guest Strip)
844 became 849 (episode 83 became episode 84)
846 became 850 (episode 84 became episode 85)
851 became 851 (episode 86 did not change)

I think it flows tons better, and comic 851 was done with this shift already in mind. I know that it is revisionist history in some ways, and it changes how the comic is experienced compared to how you read it when it came out, but its makes things less disjointed and work better. :)

In order to stay on schedule i have four comics to do over the next four days :) I'm challenging myself to see if i can have a convention here without missing comics. I haven't been able to do it in a long time, but we'll see if i can pull it off this time :)

< Dom >

Good shooters.  Amusing fanart.

"The Twain Meet"

Thursday - April 20, 2006

[Dom] - 12:00:00 - [link here]

How you know you're not living right: two of your nieces come up to you at a wedding. One asks "Hey, weren't you on Jeopardy like Uncle John was?"

The other asks "Uncle Chicken, are you going to the HYDE concert in Anaheim? Oh my GOD, he's so cute!"

My life is weird, and will stay weird until the day I die--and I'm willing to bet that there'll be some strange circumstances around my death, too. I don't know, maybe it'll be linked to organized crime, or people will never find my body, starting rumors that I'm secretly buried under third base at Pac Bell SBC AT&T Pac Bell Park, or in the foundation of some new UC Berkeley facility. Maybe I'll die under the massive pile of anime crap I've been accumulating since I was sixteen.

But anyway, it won't come close to the surreality of my family relations these days.

See, my family has always known me as "Ga," the quiet, nerdy one in the family (well, okay, one of the quiet, nerdy ones). Their recent discovery of the side of me known as "Dom" is a shock to them. In a recent trip to Tahoe, I overheard a conversation where they discussed stories they'd heard about me outside of the family circle, like how my cousin said that when I was at my job interview, I was a completely different person than she was used to.

Or, to put it in another cousin's words, "There's the Ga we know, and then there's Dom, who signs tits."

Now, before I go any further, I'd like to clarify one thing. I don't sign tits. I signed one, ever, and it ain't happenin' again. So that statement really should be "and then there's Dom, who signed a tit once and found the experience rather distasteful."

But anyway, the point remains--I've kept the MT side of my life and the family side of my life almost entirely separate, with the biggest anomaly being one dark, dark incident at Anime Expo which involved a cousin, his friend's copy of the MegaTokyo book, and a complete lack of eye contact.

Now they know, and not only do they know, my cousin's wedding on Saturday (note that I've referenced four entirely different cousins in this rant--I have 18, so if there is any cousin overlap, I'll tell you) was marked with a conversation with a fifth cousin about the recent eBay auctions, in which Fred's sketches went for a sizable amount. That produced the following conversation:

"Dude, sell out. *pause, grab an in-law* Hey, Burns, tell Ga what to do. If people are willing to spend that much money on pencil sketches, how about you give them an original? It's not ripping them off if they're willing to pay that much for it!"

"My advice to you is: sell out. Trust me, work doesn't get any more fun as you get older."

There was a lot of swearing in that conversation that I've omitted, but there was a lot of alcohol involved that I've omitted too, so I guess it's fairly even.

So, in conclusion, my family is awesome, even though they occasionally make me realize the folly of my existence by asking me to translate their J-rock magazines for them (yeah, this has happened too, to the same niece that was mentioned at the beginning). But I still don't think anyone would be willing to buy an SGD strip. I mean, Fred already overpays for them--meaning that he pays for them at all.

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