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Four comic book cognoscenti celebrate Steve Ditko in Episode 154 of Eating the Fantastic

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  Arlen Schumer, Carl Potts, Eating the Fantastic, Javier Hernandez, Zack Kruse    Posted date:  September 17, 2021  |  No comment


Last Saturday, something magical happened at the Bottle Works Ethnic Arts Center in Johnstown Pennsylvania — a one-day mini-convention was held to honor a hometown hero, the legendary Steve Ditko. And because the event was organized with the cooperation of his family, I was not only able to spend time with other comic fans and creators, but was privileged with the presence of Ditko’s nephews and brother as well.

Since you couldn’t be there with me, I decided to get some of the mini-con’s special guests to share their stories here about Steve Ditko’s life and legacy. Because this is a podcast which uses food to loosen the tongues of its guests, and since there was no time during the short one-day event to head out for lunch or dinner, I brought along a Spider-Man PEZ dispenser so I could offer my guests candy. Plus I ran over to Coney Island Johnstown — in business for more than a century — and picked up some gobs — think of them as a regional variation of whoopee pies — which I handed out to some of my guests before we began chatting.

As I wandered the exhibitors area, I was able to grab time with four guests — Javier Hernandez, Zack Kruse, Carl Potts, and Arlen Schumer — all of whom had taken part earlier that day on a panel about Steve Ditko.

Cartoonist Javier Hernandez has been publishing comics through his own imprint Los Comex since 1998, His character El Muerto was made into a live action film starring Wilmer Valderrama in 2007. Hernandez co-founded the Latino Comics Expo in 2011, and created the zine You Don’t Know Ditko, an expanded deluxe edition of which debuted at Ditko-Con.

Zack Kruse is the author of Mysterious Travelers: Steve Ditko and the Search for a New Liberal Identity. His comic strip, Mystery Solved!, appeared in Skeptical Inquirer, and his essays have been published in Inks: The Journal of the Comics Studies Society, Studies in Comics, and Critique: Studies in Contemporary Fiction. And he also has a gorgeous Ditko-inspired tattoo.

Carl Potts began his comics career in 1975, eventually spending 13 years as an editor at Marvel, where he not only discovered and/or mentored the likes of Arthur Adams, Jim Lee, Mike Mignola, and others, but occasionally worked with Steve Ditko. he’s given seminars on visual storytelling techniques at the School of Visual Arts, Parsons, New York University, LucasArts, and elsewhere, and presented his lecture on Sequential Visual Storytelling for the con Saturday afternoon.

Arlen Schumer is the author and designer of the The Silver Age of Comic Book Art which when it was published won the Independent Book Publishers Award for Best Popular Culture Book. He’s a pop culture authority whose visual lectures on creators such as Jack Kirby, Jim Steranko, and of course, Steve Dkitko, are a must-watch on YouTube.

Join us to hear Javier Hernandez analyze the hypnotizing choreography of Spider-Man’s fight scenes, Zack Kruse explain how Ditko’s early work for Charlton held the seeds of everything the artist did later in his career, Carl Potts reveal what happened when he returned to Ditko an original page of Creeper art after he learned it had been stolen, and Arlen Schumer declare Ditko was more than just a great comic book artist, but instead a great American artist who happened to create comics — plus many more fascinating insights.

Here’s how you can hang with us at Ditko-Con —

1) Subscribe at Apple Podcasts — where I hope you’ll be tempted to sample a few of the 153 previous episodes.

2) Use the RSS feed of http://eatingthefantastic.libsyn.com/rss on the device of your choice.

3) Or listen using the embed below.

Now have a closer look at my guests —

Javier Hernandez


Zack Kruse …

… and his awesome Eternity tattoo


Carl Potts


Arlen Schumer


If you enjoyed this episode and want to support my mission of breaking bread with creators of the fantastic while letting you eavesdrop, there are several ways you can help bring this podcast to the attention of potential new listeners looking for science fiction, fantasy, horror, and comics ear candy —

One is to rate Eating the Fantastic on Apple Podcasts and like it on Facebook.

Also — you could tell your friends about the show by sending them a link to your favorite episode and letting them know what I’m doing here.

Finally — I hope you’ll consider becoming a supporter of Eating the Fantastic, and help this podcast continue.

You could make a small recurring monthly donation over at Patreon, where there are various perks involved depending on your level of support, such as access to a patrons-only blog, getting a shout-out on the show, stickers, postcards, and more.

Or if an ongoing level of commitment’s not for you, or if Patreon’s just not your thing, then consider tossing a couple of bucks in the tip jar instead and making a one-time donation of any size via Paypal.me.

Or you could head on over to https://ko-fi.com/eatingthefantastic and send me the funds to cover the cost of a cup of coffee.

Please join me two weeks from now when I head to AwesomeCon break bread with writer, editor, and colorist Renée Witterstaeter, who (among many other accomplshments) not only spearheaded the reintroduction of She-Hulk at Marvel, but actually broke the fourth wall by making multiple appearances in the comic.

Thanks for listening!





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