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San Diego Comic Con: SP-N7
Dates: Jul 22 - 26
Location: San Diego Convention Center, 111 Harbor Dr, San Diego, CA 92101, USA ( MAP)Details:Clint & Dawn Wolf will be at San Diego Comic Con, as Lab Reject Studios. We will be at booth N7 in Small Press.








3 thoughts on “555 – Concepts Of A Plan”
Dr. Norman (not a real doctor)
Oh for crissake …
Crazyman
I hope she’s got more than 12% of a plan… 😅
Mattexian
Hopefully she’s not pulling a “Leroy Jenkins!”
Latest Comics
#237. 227 – Flyaway Blues
18 Oct 08, 2014
#236. 226 – The Sky’s The Limit
17 Oct 01, 2014
#235. 225 – Transportation Breakdown
49 Sep 24, 2014
#234. 224 – Time To Get High
50 Sep 17, 2014
#233. EPISODE TEN
59 Sep 15, 2014
#232. 223 – Surrounded (END OF EPISODE 9)
50 Aug 27, 2014
#231. 222 – Network Overhead
54 Aug 20, 2014
#230. 221 – This Hat Remembers Him
14 Aug 13, 2014
#229. 220 – Cope Springs Eternal
17 Aug 06, 2014
#228. 219 – Rejection Notice
17 Jul 16, 2014
#227. 218 – Property And Loss
29 Jul 09, 2014
#226. 217 – Out Of Focus
28 Jul 02, 2014
#225. 216 – Red Eyes At Mourning
16 Jun 25, 2014
#224. 215 – Grave Matters
13 Jun 18, 2014
#223. 214 – A Moment With Suzie, Part 2
11 Jun 11, 2014
#222. 213 – Second Chance Offer
20 Jun 04, 2014
#221. 212 – Frank Talk
13 May 28, 2014
#220. 211 – Threat Assessment
17 May 21, 2014
#219. 210 – Body Count
20 May 14, 2014
#218. 209 – Back On Solid Ground
16 May 07, 2014
Latest Chapters
Episode 22
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555 – Concepts Of A Plan
Tic Talk
- a habitual spasmodic contraction of the muscles, most often in the face.
- an idiosyncratic and habitual feature of a person’s behavior.
Wikipedia focuses entirely on the first. I’m going to talk about the second. In particular, applying the idea of tics to the work of fleshing out a character. Now, this is probably best done in moderation, but when it works out you get some very unique and very memorable results. In honor of a certain franchise re-emerging this week, I could bring up a certain shrunken green Jedi Master and his weird manner of speech — strange it was, yes? But forget it you will not! Identify him readily with it, you will. Character habits don’t have to be vocal. The Caine Mutiny made a big deal out of Captain Queeg’s compulsive need to constantly swivel a pair of steel balls in his hand when he got nervous, which ends up being visual shorthand to show his degenerating mental state. The silent picture serial villain of yore twirls his mustache as he contemplates evil deeds. But where comics are concerned, I think it’s mostly (and perhaps ironically, given the silent nature of the medium) in the speech. Sometimes it’s even done with the visuals of the speech, like the way the Endless in Neil Gaiman’s Sandman all have their own styles of font and word balloons, but it can also come through in the clipped, rough statements of a character like Rorshach in Watchmen. People in real life have all sorts of tics, verbal and otherwise. In fiction I wouldn’t do it for it’s own sake, necessarily, since a lot of time verbal tics serve as filler and fictional conversation is a filtered, heightened thing that doesn’t have room for every “um”, “like”, or “know what I mean?” — except where that might reinforce character. I’m going to use Rosa as an example here. When Rosa asks a question, she often ends it by saying “yeah.” It’s not just, “So, now we bargain?” it’s “So, now we bargain, yeah?” That’s a tic. And my intent with it was always to reinforce the “wheeler dealer” aspect of her character. After all, one of the first tricks they teach salespeople is that they want to get the customer saying “yes.” I could just as easily have Rosa ending her questions with “no?” but that introduces “no” into the conversation. Counterproductive! But on the other hand, it’s not really a calculated thing on her part — it’s calculated on mine. Something else would be establishing certain ways characters speak and then trying to hold to that, unless the intent is to show that things are out of sorts. If Frank suddenly started speaking in paragraphs, something’s wrong, and hopefully it’s not because I screwed up and am shoving all those words out of his mouth for no good reason. Way back in Episode 1 I used a subtle exchange between Suzie and the cambot interviewing her to indicate she’s not all that comfortable with big words, and I do my best to keep that consistent. She’s not dumb, so where it pertains to her business she can get more complicated, or she can work things out from context, but she’s no Uncle Chuck in terms of just filling the air with all manner of multisyllabic vernacular and supposition. And even Chuck’s got nothing on some hyper-educated Safe Zone luminary like Iphigenia Langhorne who throws around the verbosity like her doctorate depended on it. Call ’em mannerisms if you want if calling ’em tics makes you–well–twitchy. Like any utility in the writer’s toolbox, they’re best used carefully, but I find they can be extremely helpful to bring your characters to a consistent life.Calendar
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