Barry was interviewed!

Hey! Wanna here me talk about comics, comics and more comics? Sure you do. Head on over and watch my interview on TGT Mesia with Kurt Sasso. 30 years of Phineus in an interview. Woo!

Newest #twogeekstalking interview w/ Barry Linck (@phinmagic ) creator of the comic; A Phineus Story: Magician for Hire (2021) | Two Geeks Talking https://youtu.be/ZhgtYj8Onr4 via @YouTube Take the time to subscribe to the YouTube channel, like the video and leave a comment.

Phineus signs with Outland Entertainment

Mirrored from Phinmagic.com.

This week I officially announce that I have signed Phineus:Magician for Hire to Outland Entertainment! Phineus joins the ranks of  The Path, Baerg Tobar, Stupid Users and more at OE!

Being a part of Outland will allow Phineus to be better promoted, we’ll have printed books available eventually, a mobile downloadable series available for your smart phones as well as other goodies coming down the pike!

I have been hosted for a while by OE, but have waied for the official plug to announce it here! Check out the Press Release posted at the OE site.

So, all great news and some very exciting new stuff coming from all of us here at Phinmagic!

Cheers!

Barry

Maurice Sendak To Concerned Parents: Go To Hell!

Mirrored from Phinmagic.com.

Maurice Sendak To Concerned Parents: Go To Hell!

By Charlie Jane Anders, 4:17 PM on Mon Oct 12 2009, 20,182 views (Edit, to draft, Slurp)

 

 

If you’re worried about taking your kids to see Where The Wild Things Are after reports of crying children having to leave screenings of the rough cut, halfway through, then Maurice Sendak has a message for you: “Go to hell.”

 

A story in the Oct. 19 Newsweek contains this classic exchange:

 

    What do you say to parents who think the Wild Things film may be too scary?

 

    Sendak: I would tell them to go to hell. That’s a question I will not tolerate.

 

    Because kids can handle it?

 

    Sendak: If they can’t handle it, go home. Or wet your pants. Do whatever you like. But it’s not a question that can be answered.

 

    Jonze: Dave, you want to field that one?

 

    Eggers: The part about kids wetting their pants? Should kids wear diapers when they go to the movies? I think adults should wear diapers going to it, too. I think everyone should be prepared for any eventuality.

 

So apparently I was wrong about Michael Bay being the film-maker most eager to have us all wear diapers to the movies.

 

[Newsweek, via SFGate]

24 Hour write-up in the Pittsburgh Post Gazette!

Mirrored from Phinmagic.com.

From left to right, Loran Skinkis, 38, of White­hall, Nate McDo­nough, 21, of Mount Wash­ing­ton, and John Tow­ers, 35, of Belle­vue, begin the chal­lenge of com­plet­ing a 24-page comic in 24 hours at the Pitts­burgh 24-Hour Comics event Sat­ur­day at Time Tun­nel Comics and Col­lectibles in Cas­tle Shannon.

It was all fun and games until weari­ness set in. Then, despite the heroic strug­gles of a plucky band of comic book artists, every­one just threw in their ink-stained tow­els and went home.

In truth, the story line was this: seven self-published and/or ama­teur artists sat down around 3 Sat­ur­day after­noon to cre­ate their own graphic nov­els as part of an inter­na­tional “24-Hour Comics” day.

Patrick Don­ley, owner of Time Tun­nel Comics in Cas­tle Shan­non, orga­nized the event in the hope that shared inspi­ra­tion — not to men­tion pizza, beer and soda — would spark a kind of “Hey kids, let’s put on a show!” enthu­si­asm among local cre­ative types.

I’m hop­ing to take pic­tures and put them up every hour on my Face­book page,” Mr. Don­ley said. “Pic­tures of our grad­ual decline.”

The store owner would end up nap­ping on the couch, but for the most part, the artists kept going with the dogged reserve of Lois Lane in pur­suit of a story.

Artists through­out the world — and for some rea­son, a large num­ber in Fin­land — took up the chal­lenge. A stan­dard 24-page comic book might nor­mally take weeks or months to complete.

Accord­ing to Scott Hed­lund, a Belle­vue artist whose project con­sisted of cre­at­ing pan­els to doc­u­ment the Time Tun­nel event every 10 min­utes, most of his col­leagues left between 4:40 a.m. and 9 a.m. with almost all pages drawn but not inked.

A cou­ple — Dave Hobbs of Dor­mont and Nate McDo­nough, a recent Art Insti­tute of Pitts­burgh grad from Colum­bus, Ohio — fin­ished their projects.

I’m hav­ing fun,” Mr. Hobbs said around 11 p.m. Sat­ur­day, “although I haven’t actu­ally sat down to draw for more than an hour straight in years … my hand is killing me.”

His comic was a bizarre mix of “Mr. Men” char­ac­ters act­ing out the plot of the Bruce Willis thriller “Die Hard.”

Alan Rick­man was played by “Mr. Rude,” with “Lit­tle Miss Scary” as his hench­man, Karl. This is one comic that won’t be posted or pub­lished, alas, because the licenses belong to others.

I just wanted to do this for myself,” said Mr. Hobbs, who was treat­ing the event “as a min­i­mal­ist episode.”

Many of the artists have worked on the clas­sic super­hero graphic novel, but there was more of a sense of fun in these projects.

Barry Linck was a stu­dent at West Allegheny High School when he cre­ated “Phineus, Magi­cian for Hire.” Twenty-two years later, he has cre­ated 27 issues around the adven­tures of his para­nor­mal inves­ti­ga­tor, his wife and assorted mon­sters and vam­pires plagu­ing con­tem­po­rary Pittsburgh.

The print books are avail­able through his Web site (www.phinmagic.com), where online episodes are updated at least three times a week.

The youngest artist tak­ing the 24-hour chal­lenge was Mr. McDo­nough, 21, who pro­duced a black-and-white sec­ond issue of a self-published comic about a char­ac­ter named “Grixly.” Issue No. 1, which he had on hand, cost 99 cents and was labeled “Sug­gested for mature readers.”

That cover [mes­sage] has noth­ing to do with what’s inside of it, it’s only because there are imma­ture things con­tained within that I have to have a dis­claimer,” he said.

Work­ing in his stock­ing feet, he said, “I’m doing my best to make myself at home here.”

Casual was cer­tainly the mood, with mp3 play­ers knock­ing out tunes through portable speak­ers around the six tables set up in the back of the Time Tun­nel store. Scat­tered around the tables were 2-liter bot­tles of soda, numer­ous opened bags of chips and other snacks, cook­ies, left­over pizza and, near­ing the end of the day, three large stain­less steel urns of cof­fee were brought in from a shop in Mt. Lebanon.

There had been stag­ings of the 24-hour chal­lenge around Pitts­burgh before but this was a first for Mr. Don­ley, who said he was hope­ful of try­ing it again next year.

Besides bring­ing in food, drink and Sharpies, Mr. Don­ley had arranged some­thing even more valu­able. Larry Young, a San Francisco-based pub­lisher and a long­time friend, flew in to chat up the artists and cus­tomers, and was will­ing to take a look at portfolios.

You’re like the Lando Cal­riss­ian of this place; you’re the admin­is­tra­tor of this facil­ity,” Mr. Young said to the owner.

Mr. Young’s com­pany, AiT/Planet Lar, car­ries a lot of weight in the inde­pen­dent pub­lish­ing indus­try. He said a few artists brought their work into Time Tun­nel for a look-see, most notably one guy who had “maybe 80″ pages of a graphic novel retelling of Shakespeare’s “Mac­Beth” … done in pointillism.

This thing was com­pletely unabridged, and he decided at one point there had to be a bet­ter tran­si­tion between scenes, so he wrote one in.”

One of the 24-hour par­tic­i­pants had a more mod­ern take in cre­at­ing his comic. Dan Green­wald of Shaler works by day as an admin­is­tra­tor for Carnegie Mel­lon Uni­ver­sity. Three times a week, he works on his online vig­i­lante comic, “The Blue Wraith.” (www.bluewraith.com). For this event, how­ever, he was doing a very unheroic take on a slice-of-life story set in an office — “Just for some­thing dif­fer­ent, just to stretch myself,” said Mr. Greenwald.

His work was not done in pen and ink, but entirely on a lap­top com­puter. After scan­ning stan­dard comic-book frames squares into an Adobe Pho­to­shop pro­gram, he was draw­ing with a WACOM inter­ac­tive stylus.

It’s kind of a hybrid,” he said.

Some of the oth­ers, like Mr. Green­wald, had met dur­ing 2006 and 2007 24-hour chal­lenges. Although he was enjoy­ing the exer­cise, he said, “I’m at the hob­by­ist level with aspi­ra­tions to go fur­ther but have no real delu­sions that this will afford me a liv­ing at this point.”

Maria Sci­ullo can be reached at msciullo@post-gazette.com or 412–263-1478.

Read more: http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/09278/1003079–44.stm#ixzz0T3zHdFGd

24 hr coverage!!

Mirrored from Phinmagic.com.

Also TGT pod­cast with an inter­view of me here.