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September 26, 2004

Ladies Love Jon Stewart


Okay, red-blooded male Gothamist readers who are seeking girls who laugh, like the snark, and are interested in the direction this country is going in: It seems the part of the code has been cracked on how to meet lovely ladies in a place that isn't a bar or a comedy club. You need to go to events where Jon Stewart is present. Eric at State of the Art went to Stewart's book signing and writes:
I have to say that the ladies really do love John Stewart. There were some very attractive females in line and you could, quite frankly, cut the sexual tension with a knife. It was hot. They were hot. John Stewart was hot.
He also took this fetching picture of a girl who, like many we know, thinks of Jon Stewart as her secret boyfriend.

You can read excerpts of America (The Book) at the Daily Show website. Gothamist on Stewart's attitudes towards blogs.

Posted by tshey at 05:45 PM

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Posted by tshey at 12:59 AM | Comments (0)

September 25, 2004

saved by the beagle

"A year ago, Seattle's Fantagraphics was on the brink of bankruptcy. Now it's in the black, thanks to good ol' Charlie Brown and a pair of dogged believers who turned a cranky fanzine into the most widely respected comics publisher in America."

"It's easy to get lost looking for Fantagraphics' headquarters. Situated just off I-5 on Lake City Way Northeast, it's neighbored on the left by a, shall we say, imaginatively decorated house: hand-painted signs and bizarre metal tchotchkes leap about the exterior fence like a Dal birdhouse explosion. Visiting for the first time, it's tempting to mistake that oddball unit for FHQ. Hey maybe comics people really are all nuts!

"That fantasy begins dissipating as soon as you walk up to the 28-year-old publisher's actual offices next door; go inside and it disperses entirely. For one thing, this office is a two-story house with a basement, an old place with a surprising number of rooms around a surprising number of corners. The kitchen is triangulated by a staffer's desk, a Xerox machine, and the refrigerator, which itself is a couple steps away from the office of Gary Groth, the company's president and the majordomo of The Comics Journal, the monthly news and criticism magazine. Groth's office window overlooks a back porch and the alleyway. The house is not brightly lit the better, one suspects, to concentrate on the tasks at hand.

"'You should have seen it before,' says Eric Reynolds, leading me to a basement room full of newly built metal shelves. An affable, sandy-haired, 33-year-old Californian, who began as a Fantagraphics intern over a decade ago and is now publicist and special projects editor (he helms The Complete Crumb Comics, the ongoing series dedicated to the godfather of 'underground comix,' Robert Crumb), Reynolds is showing me the company's extensive, neatly kept library of old comics and research materials. 'The old shelves were way less efficient,' he says..."

for more, visit the seattle weekly.

Posted by tshey at 02:23 PM | Comments (0)