I wrote a story for the upcoming CBGB comics anthology from the fine folks at BOOM! Studios, with the uber-talented Dave Crosland on art. He’s making this story absolutely sing. Dave posted some art teases on his blog which I’ve swiped below. The story is a lot of fun – a sci-fi, punk rock opus (OK, it’s not an opus).

Continue reading No Future
Our new video game, Blacklight: Tango Down, dropped today on Xbox Live. So excited. Check it out and give it a download.
A proof-of-concept trailer we created for our Samurai VS Ninja movie. All effects powered by the Unreal game engine.
I want to see this cartoon. Like now.

is fantastic. via the also fantastic io9.com:
Write comic books if you love comic books so much that you want to write them. Don’t write them like movies. Comics can do a lot of things that movies can’t do, and vice versa. It’s a shame when so many comics are storyboard-style, low-budget pitches for movies. Let me see the weird stuff.
on a related note, i was unaware that Robin died on an alien planet:

i love david mamet. the memo below basically sums up a good portion of his ON DIRECTING FILM book, which really be required reading for those in the storytelling space. via movieline:
“CBS’s drama The Unit, about the lives of the highly trained members of a top-secret military division, was canceled last year, but a memo to its writing staff from its executive producer David Mamet has just surfaced online. (The source appears to be the online writing collective Ink Canada.) If you think you know where this is heading, you might be wrong:
Besides the fact that it’s written in all-caps, there’s nothing particularly ranty, pejorative or potty-mouthed about it. Rather, Mamet lays down an extremely sensible case for what makes good television, imploring them to avoid expository writing for what he characterizes as authentic “drama.” Along the way, he refers repeatedly to the “blue-suited penguins” (probably the copious-note-givers at the network), while passing along some very useful advice (“any time two characters are talking about a third, the scene is a crock of shit”) and helpful writing exercises (“pretend the characters can’t speak and write a silent movie”). Screenwriters, take note: You may think you knew this already, but there’s nothing like Mamet for a good kick-in-the-ass reminder.
Continue reading mamet’s magnificent memo