Utilitarian Review 8/17/13

On HU

I took a week off here for the most part, but we did have one piece:

Chris Gavaler on Elysium.

Utilitarians Everywhere

I got to write about feral hippies and the new Horse’s Ha record at the Chicago Reader.

At the Atlantic I wrote about:

Geek girls and the Spectacular Now.

the fact that feminist comic books are really popular.

At Esquire I listed ten female superhero movies I’d like to see.

At Splice Today I wrote about:

Indonesia and genocide and why we shouldn’t be trusting our government to spy on us.

the seizure I had over the weekend, and why health care is so expensive.

Other Links

Interview with Mikki Kendall and Flavia Dzodan at the Hairpin about feminism and race and Hugo Schwyzer.

Jaimie Utt on Hugo Schwyzer and being a feminist guy.

Madison Moore on feeling sorry for Lady Gaga.

Subashini on awkwardness and gender.
 

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Utilitarian Review 8/10/13

News

We’re going to take a week off to recharge here at HU. So we’ll be back around the 17th or thereabouts with new content. I may highlight featured archives posts throughout the week depending on how peppy I’m feeling.
 
On HU,

Featured Archive Post: Derik Badman on comics and poetry.

I argue that The Spy Who Came In From the Cole is not very good.

Walidah Imarisha with an excerpt from a short story that is going to be included in the sci-fi and social justice anthology Octavia’s Brood.

Chris Gavaler on Wolverine and superheroes never growing old.

Alex Buchet with the first part of a series on the prehistory of the superhero — in this one discussing Enlightenment notions of individuality.

I talk about Dan Clowes, the Death Ray, and superhero parodies.

Isaac Butler on “The Last of Us”, the Watchmen of video games.

Patrick Carland provides an introduction to Russian animation.
 
Utilitarians Everywhere

Kind of a crazy week for the freelancing.

I was interviewed on Weekend Edition about Johnny Cash’s Ring of Fire.

At Slate XX I wrote about how it’s in my interest as a guy to be a feminist.

One of my drawings was annexed by a hedge fund manager.

At the Atlantic I wrote about:

—how my son is unaccountably a thespian.

—why, unlike Hillary Chute, I don’t necessarily want comics to be poetry.

At Splice Today I wrote about:

—Why Walter Becker’s 1st solo album was better than Steely Dan compatriot Donald Fagen’s overrated Nightfly.

Feminists, transwomen, and gendered discrimination against men.

I wrote a piece on social media rules for teachers at the Loyola Center for Digital Ethics.

At the Goodman Project I wrote about Trayvon Martin and misandry.

Other Links

Selena Kitt on wanting to be a slut.

Mary Beth Williams on why men shouldn’t be scared of feminists.

Alyssa Rosenberg with a great reported piece on sexism in comics (HT: Isaac Butler)

Zack Beauchamp on scientism and ethics.

Why a black girl should be Wonder Woman.

Katie Ryder on white music fans being afraid of difference.
 

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Utilitarian Review 8/3/13

News

I’m supposed to be on NPR’s Weekend Edition, I think today, (Update: Nope, it’s on Sunday) talking about Johnny Cash and “Ring of Fire”. Not sure what time though….

On HU

Featured Archive Post: Sarah Horrocks on Salammbo.

Me on the sometimes pleasing but not this time crappiness of Bonnie Raitt.

I express skepticism about ev psych’s ability to understand the mind.

Me on conventions of violence in We3, Spy vs. Spy, and martyrs.

Richard Cook on the crappy Evil Dead remake.

Chris Gavaler on how a radioactive spider bite means you have puberty for all eternity.

A 50 Shades/Cthulhu ebook which you can purchase for your enjoyment, and/or to help us help you. Heaving tentacles! Thrashing bosoms! Limping ecommerce!

Ng Suat Tong on whether Joss Whedon deliberately defaced John Totleben’s art.
 
Utilitarians Everywhere

At the Atlantic I wrote about how Johnny Cash sang a love song to himself.

At Wired I write about crazy Japanese fusion and how the internet killed the music bargain bin.

At Slate I talk about the feminist blogosphere, male writers, and Hugo Schwyzer.

At Splice I talk about:

Why Anthony Weiner’s penis is funny.

G.I. Joe, Mike Vosburg, and work for hire.

At the Good Men Project I talk about transgender kids and gender essentialism.

 
Other Links

Osvaldo Oyola on Spider-Man, Watchmen, and race.

Tom Spurgeon hosts a conversation about the direction of comics journalism.

Noam Scheiber on Obama’s boy’s club.
 

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Voices from the Archive: Kurt Busiek on Copyright Extension and Comics

Kurt Busiek weighed in in comments a while back about what rights the original creators should have when copyright is extended on works owned by corporations (i.e. Superman.) His thoughts are below.

>> What is your view of the termination rights that have been introduced along with the copyright extensions? >>

I’m not Noah, but I think they’re a necessary corollary of the extensions.

When someone buys an intellectual property, they’re essentially licensing it for the term of copyright, after which point it goes into the public domain. So they were never buying it “forever,” they were buying it for a clearly-defined number of years.

If Congress extends copyright, they’re changing the deal, making their license last longer. The reasoning behind the termination rights is that if the term lasts longer, the purchaser never bargained for that extra period. So who owns the IP for the extended period? It was supposed to be the public, but it isn’t. So should it be the purchaser? The creator? Someone else?

The solution they came up with was to give the creator an opportunity to reclaim the property for that extended period, rather than simply to give the purchaser that extra chunk of ownership time for free. If you’re going to extend copyright in the first place, that seems reasonable — when the company that is now DC bought Superman, they did not have any expectation that they would still own him today. So them owning him today is not part of the initial deal — it’s an artifact of copyright extension, and not something they ever bargained for in good faith. And having the government just hand it to them is a preposterous transfer of value from the public to corporations. [Not that the copyright extension wasn’t a preposterous giveaway anyway, but it’s slightly less preposterous this way. If the deal is going to be made longer, then the terms have been altered, and the other terms should be subject to renegotiation too.]

This all extends from the copyright extension, but it makes sense. If you’d only leased your Camaro for a period of time and the government decided that the lease was going to be extended, you wouldn’t expect that the extension would be free. Not that the Camaro comparison makes any sense — you own that Camaro, but you don’t own the right to make sequels to it, to spin off a line of She-Camaros and the Legion of Teen Camaros and Camaro’s Girl Friend Caprice. Those rights remain with GM.

Still, Congress was giving away what belonged (or would belong, after copyright expiration) to the people, so as the people’s representatives, they got to decide whether to give it to corporations for free or to make it possible to renegotiate the term at the point the deal would have ended under the old rules. It’s almost shocking that they didn’t wholly benefit corporations, but it’s logical that they didn’t — it’s not merely that nobody knew Superman would still be valuable today, it’s that nobody expected Superman to still be an ownable property today, so if he is, there’s room for other changes.

I think copyright lasts too long. I think 25 years for corporate copyrights is too short, but somewhere in between there’s probably a good number. Good luck to anyone trying to get that past Congress against the will of Disney, though.

And I think $11 million is a lot of money, but it’s a fraction of what Superman should have earned for its creators. As a comparison, CARRIE was an early sale, too, and the deal was weighted heavily toward the publisher, but it’s made its creator a lot more money than the first couple hundred pages of Superman. Or TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD, to pick another first novel. That the Superman creators were profligate with what they got doesn’t mean it was enough — and while they might well have been legally stuck with it, DC shouldn’t be any less stuck with copyright expiration and/or reversion, but as noted, corporations change the rules in ways we’d call greedy if it was individuals doing it.

The freaky part is, the value in having Bob Kane happy and pro-DC versus the expense and public-perception damage of having this kind of case go on is a monetary issue, too, and it’s not like this stuff came as a surprise. The point at which to head off this kind of case — not just for Superman, but for Kirby creations and Gardner Fox creations and so forth and so on — was ten years before the termination window opened, and through something more generous than a nice pension that’s dwarfed by the scale of the profits rolling in.

These days, of course, contracts are written to get around the specter of potential future copyright extension and reversion, though who knows whether that’ll be held to be legal in decades to come? If it doesn’t, I expect that we’ll be hearing that creators who take advantage of changes in the law are greedy, while corporations taking advantage are being fiduciarily responsible.

So it goes. And $11 million is a lot of money, but how much of the $4-plus billion George Lucas is getting is about the IP rights to STAR WARS? Lots of heated argument to be had on that, I’m sure — but circling back to the start, I think termination rights are an artifact of extension. If termination shouldn’t be allowed, then extension shouldn’t have been, either.

In which case, Superman would have entered the public domain in 1994, and been free for anyone to use for the past 18 years. Every day of DC’s ownership of the character since then (plus the years of ownership still to come) was a gift given from the public to DC, and one of the restrictions we put on that gift was that the creators had the right to take it back during a particular window.

Considering the value of that gift, the public had the right to put whatever strings they wanted on it, really, and if one of those strings was that Siegel and Shuster and their estates got a shot at benefiting from that gift too, that’s not really so bad.

 

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Utilitarian Review 7/20/13

On HU

Featured Archive Post: Miriam Libicki on Terri Moore and Jaime Hernandez.

Ng Suat Tong on the Korean War, Kurtzman/Toth, and propaganda.

Jog on late Ditko.

Betsy Phillips argues Superman isn’t Jesus, but Moses.

Isaac Butler on the Walking Dead video game and narrative.

Ng Suat Tong on Krazy Kat, Jack Chick, comics and kitsch.

Chris Gavaler on supervillains, the Silver Age, and the Boston Marathon bombing.

Me on Kim Thompson, negative criticism, and loving comics.
 
Utilitarians Everywhere

At the Atlantic I write about:

why psychologists are too much like superheroes.

Realism and banality in the Conjuring.

At Splice Today I talk about

The Trayvon Martin case and misandry.

how a client screwed me out of thousands of dollars.
 
Other Links

Domingos Isabelinho asks whether comics criticism ever existed.

Ta-Nehisi Coates on racial profiling.
 

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Utilitarian Review 7/13/13

On Hu
Featured Archive Post: Richard Cooke on Finder: Voice and gender.

Bert Stabler on the new Pixies video and race.

Peter Sattler on Dan Clowes’ agonized relationship with comics.

Me on Finder:Voice, power, knowledge, and penises.

Michael Arthur on furries, nostalgia, and the mainstream media.

Chris Gavaler says “I Am Tonto.

Jacob Canfield on how late Ditko is worse than Jack Chick.

Ng Suat Tong on Utsubora and the dangers of artsy erotica.
 
Utilitarians Everywhere
 
Other Links

At the Good Men Project I talk about how misogyny hurts men.

At the Atlantic I talk about racism, sexism, and the Pixies new video.

At Splice I write about:

Joy Stecher and Kate Brislin’s great version of Our Town.

How work for hire is not spiritual debasement.
 
Other Links
Jog writes about late Ditko.

 Mind

Utilitarian Review 7/6/13

On HU

Featured Archive Post Anja Flower on queerness and the uses of yaoi.

Nicolas Labarre reviews Blood Feast in 5 panels.

Me on W.W. Denslow’s beginning chapter illustrations for the Wizard of Oz.

Me on gender and comics in Dan Clowes’ Wilson and Like a Velvet Glove.

Ng Suat Tong on Graham Chaffee’s Good Dog.

James Romberger on gender and film in Godard’s Contempt.

Chuck Berry for the 4th of July.

Chris Gavaler on World War Z, stay at home dads, and Muslim zombies.
 
Utilitarians Everywhere

I write about changes in fatherhood and the rising number of single dads at the Atlantic.

I wrote about confronting trafficking without arguing that all prostitutes are trafficked at the Goodmen Project.

At Splice Today I wrote about

People’s coverage of a transgender girl and the bedrock reality of gender.

Chicago Public Radio’s awful, eugenics-like marketing campaign.
 
Other Links

Kim Thompson on being an elitist comics critic.

On the Baffler’s new editor.

Abigail Rine on how he’s not sleeping through the night yet.

Ta-Nehisi Coates on manhood among the ruins.

Genevieve Valentine on harassment at cons and other places.

Amy Julia Becker on reading and disability.

Mary McCarthy on Internet trolls.
 

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