Correcting errors and giving credit where due

So I open up the new Jon Sable: Freelance trade paperback, Bloodtrail, and go look at the credits page. (Okay, first I checked some color corrections, and then I looked at the credits.)

The credits list me as the color artist, with special thanks to Lovern Kindierski.

Sadly, this isn’t quite right. Lovern colored 75% of the trade, I colored 25%. What happened was that I colored the last issue, and they used that to create the credits for the trade. We corrected it in galleys, but the original crept back in (as did other technical errors on those pages.)

So let me set the record straight here. Lovern did most of the work, I came in at the last minute to help with deadline problems. I followed in his footsteps. And boy, was it a challenge… he’s really good. And working over Mike Grell, no less. Our job was to try and recreate the quality of work in Longbow Hunters with an independent comic’s budget. And deadlines.

We did a good job. Check it out.

Gor-El

Mark Evanier points out an article written by Elliot S! Maggin in the LA Times called Look! Up in the sky … It’s Al Gore! and I’m kicking myself for not making the connection earlier.

He writes about Jor-El, Superman’s Kryptonian father– you know, Marlon Brando–

…who was an eminent scientist whom the ruling “Science Council” of his world laughed out of the room when he told them that they were facing a planetary crisis: “Gentlemen, Krypton is doomed.”

But on Krypton, either the essential nature of scientists diverged from that of the open-minded and collaborative types with whom we are familiar here on Earth, or generations of “scientific” rule had befouled the Kryptonian leaders to the degree that they became as shortsighted and starchy as those who traditionally administer our own public affairs.

Like the Science Council, our leaders reacted with guffaws when one of our own rose to sound an earthshaking alarm.

Elliot’s absolutely right. (Al doesn’t thinks the planet will explode– but I do think he’s right that life is going to be damn uncomfortable for those who do make it through the impending mess.)

I’ve been wondering for a long time how people can be so shortsighted about the threat that global warming poses, particularly when it’s not all that hard to do things about it. At least I can console myself with literary precedent.

All I can say is that I hope somebody’s thinking about it, because I don’t think that anybody on this planet can build an interstellar rocket that can send a baby across light years– and you know what, to heck with the baby, I want to get off the planet.

On the NSA reading your email

1. Don’t be too impressed by their theoretical intel-gathering from email– if they were that good, they’d be able to track down spammers.

2. The NSA would probably generate a LOT of goodwill by shutting a few spammers down. Email currently costs an estimated $50 billion a year in lost productivity. That’s a measurable chunk of GDP.

3. Spam is currently estimated to be over 80% of worldwide email traffic. If the NSA shut down half of the spam traffic, the NSA would be able to search what remained much more efficiently.

4. Lord knows, it’d be easy to hide coded messages in spam. Shut ’em down, just to be preventive.