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700 Free Marvel Comics!!

This was an exciting weekend for me. I helped some guy move. (Don’t worry, he was a friend not some random guy I saw lugging a couch down a flight of stairs by himself.) I also saw a panel featuring the majority of the cast of Star Trek: The Next Generation. (I’ll tell you about it if I have time.) Finally, Marvel announced that they were releasing 700 comics for free on their digital APP. Unfortunately, they’re only free until tonight. (Well, that was the case, but because of some server issues that has changed.)
Let me get my grumbling out of the way. Firstly, on the iPhone and Android tablet versions of the app the 700 issues were not organized in the best way. There was no easy way to see all of them at once. They were divided into groups, but some issues weren’t available unless you went digging for them. And some, from what I could see, weren’t available on the app at all. I sort of get this, as they want you to be tempted to try other stuff that you see. But, I buy a ton of Marvel comics and I was most interested in trying stuff that I haven’t read before, so I had to dig for a good long time to find some gems. Now, I didn’t mind that aspect of it too much as I love digging through long boxes and this reminded me of that. To a newbie though, this was probably pretty frustrating. If you want to see what Marvel has to offer, you should be able to access the free samples as easily as possible.
The other big problem was that the server couldn’t handle all of the interest that this promotion generated. Sometimes I couldn’t log in. Other times it would crash as I was trying to load a particular category of issues. They tried to fix this on the fly, but it didn’t help much. They’ve pressed the pause button on this, so today isn’t the last day after all. Keep your eye out on the app, and I’m sure they’ll restart it soon.
All that being said, I did download over 350 new comics, and it’s hard to grumble too much about that. There are some obvious things that you should download, like any issues of House of M or Civil War that you can get your hands on. But, there are also some buried treasures in there. Things that you might miss after downloading yet another Deadpool special. Here are some of the most interesting ones I found in my hunt:
- Any Marvel Vault issue: I didn’t know that these even existed, but they’re fascinating. These are old fill-in issues that were never needed. So, they were retouched years after they were produced and released into the world. I can’t wait to check these out. The Hulk/Human Torch team-up even has Steve Ditko art!
- Age Of Apocalypse Alpha and Omega: This was one of the greatest crossovers in comics history. At least, that’s what I think. It turned all of the X-Men books on their heads and captivated my imagination and the imaginations of my friends. These two issues are the beginning and end of that series. You can also find the first issues of a bunch of the series that take place in-between.
- Deadpool Killustrated: This series is nuts. Well, at least this issue was. Deadpool is tired of killing the Marvel universe and has decided to slip into novels and kill the characters in those. It’s very metafictional, but you do get to see Deadpool kill a giant whale. So, there is that.
All right, so those are the three that I’ve come across so far. But, there are also a bunch of one-shots, graphic novels, and first issues that are worth your time. If you come across something I should check out, let me know!
Graham Becksted will tell you about the Star Trek panel some other time. He is also the author of Graham’s Grumbles, the second blog by that name that is listed in Google results when you search for Graham’s Grumbles. If you would like to be his 76th follower (thank you, bots), he can be followed on Twitter @GrahamBecksted.
Posted in Graham's Grumbles
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Tagged Age Of Apocalypse, Deadpool, Killustrated, Marvel, Next Generation, Star Trek, TNG, Vault
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More! More! More! Star Trek!

All right, as promised – MORE STAR TREK!
But first! A quick recap. In my column of a couple of weeks ago, I introduced the notion of intra-Trek fanbase fighting. For example, someone who ranks Enterprise as the weakest is probably not going to get along well with someone who ranks it the highest. In many ways it’s like the Civil War. Except nobody dies, and there are five sides. Also, unlike the Civil War, it’s not tarnished by a lame Voyager episode where they ruin the Q by having the Continuum fight a civil war.
As promised, I will now go through my ranking and explain my reasoning. Reader be warned – some of these opinions by frighten or offend you. Or possibly bore you. Hopefully, though, they sway you to giving Trek a chance.
1.) Star Trek: The Next Generation
The original series is definitely the source from which all Star Trek is birthed. But, most modern Trek, and most modern Sci-Fi TV series owe a lot more to Next Generation. It took the basic concept of a ship in space and made it respectable. It’s the original space-procedural. Every episode a problem arises and one or more member of the crew has to solve it. The characters, while lovable and interesting they’re kind of shallow. They all had episodes that focused on them but, like CSI or Law and Order, what really kept you coming back was the weekly problems. And, I think it’s that reliance on simple weekly formula that got it the highest ratings of any Trek series.
But enough about why it was popular. The reason I like it is because that simple formula lead to some great episodes that explored really interesting ideas. The captain of the ship is captured and is essentially brainwashed into becoming one of their greatest enemies. How does the crew deal with having to fight a man that they respect and adore? Luckily, it’s neatly wrapped up in two episodes, so you get to see it all unfold pretty promptly! Not only is it neatly wrapped up, it’s barely ever mentioned again. (Unless you count that one movie.)
For many years, the show was in near constant reruns. You couldn’t avoid it, and because of that I sort of took it for granted. Now that it’s been a few years and I’m actually trying to find episodes, I appreciate it so much more.
2.) Star Trek: Deep Space Nine
The first spin-off of Next Generation, this show took everything that you thought about Star Trek and turned it on its head. Instead of a ship zipping across the galaxy, this was a (relatively) stationary space station. Everything was dirty and broken down, instead of shiny and new. There were story arcs that lasted seasons, and characters grew and changed. They talked about things that the other shows avoided, like religion and government corruption.
It’s a great series that predates a lot of the arc based shows that were popular a few years ago, like Battlestar Galactica and Lost. It took concepts like the fight between the Cardassians and Bajorans (something that was briefly touched on in TNG) and fleshed it out into something deep and interesting. That story played out over the course of the whole series.
There were shades of grey to everything, which is something you can’t typically say about Star Trek. It’s definitely the most mature of the Treks.
3.) Star Trek
Now mature is something the original series oftentimes was not. It was often silly and only sometimes intentionally. I’m sure you’ve heard how ahead of its time it was, and all of that is true. But, the show was also very much of its time. For every Khan Noonian Singh and Edith Keeler episode you got one or two evil Space Hippy episode, or Kirk switching minds with a woman and William Shatner being super sexist.
That is part of the show’s charm, though. No matter how ridiculous a concept was, everyone always seemed to take it seriously and try their best to make it work.
4.) Star Trek: Voyager
Remember how I said that DS9 took TNG concepts and fleshed them out and made them better? Voyager took TNG concepts and absolutely destroyed them. They’re goal seemed to be to humanize everything. And that’s fine, except their idea of “human” seems to be generically nice.
The concept is that the USS Voyager gets lost in space tracking down a Maquis ship. The Maquis are violent rebels who don’t like how the Federation deals with the Cardassians. So, when both ships get lost in space and have to learn to work together, you wouldn’t be out of line in expecting sparks to fly. They don’t. The Maquis integrate pretty smoothly and became as nice and generic as the rest of the crew.
That’s the first in a long line of missteps that the show made. They turned the Borg from an amazing, unknowable, unstoppable force of nature into people that could be turned and bargained with. They made the lovable, immortal space imp Q into a guy who wants to have babies and settle down.
It did so much damage to great Trek concepts that for the next series they couldn’t continue the series forward in time.
5.) Enterprise
The series that wanted to be cool so badly that they dropped Star Trek from the title. Despite that, the first episode had an Enterprise, references to the eighth movie, and Klingons. It really couldn’t have been more Star Trek. Well, it could have also been good.
Now, my knowledge of this show is admittedly sparse, but that’s only because I gave up on it. I’ve seen a handful of episodes and it just doesn’t hold up. There aren’t cool storylines, just convoluted ones. Take, for example, the “Temporal Cold War,” a concept so dense that even typing it’s name is boring.
The last episode is a prime example of where the series went wrong. The entire episode serves as an hour long pep talk to Commander Riker as he prepares for a difficult decision in an episode of TNG. The whole thing so desperately wants to fit into Trek lore that they’ll drag stuff from the other series in entirely needlessly.
Anyway, that’s about all I can muster on this topic for now. Seriously, if you want to change my mind about any of this tell me some episodes I should watch. I love talking Trek even if it is with someone who violently disagrees with me.
Graham Becksted hopes you live long and prosper. Unless you like Enterprise. He is the author of Graham’s Grumbles the second blog by that name that is listed in Google results when you search for Graham’s Grumbles. If you would like to be his 64th follower (thank you, bots), he can be followed on Twitter @GrahamBecksted.
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Tagged Deep Space Nine, DS9, Enterprise, Next Generation, Original Series, Star Trek, TNG
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Star Trek: First Blogtact

Sci-fi and fantasy fans have traditionally been marginalized by society. Outcasts and nerds – mocked in TV and high school. Eventually, they started conventions and message boards where they could gather and marginalize each other.
Now, not only are nerds not marginalized, they run the show. Who would have thought that, other than a romantic comedy about a sinking ship, all of the top grossing films in the world are nerd centric. They feature aliens, robots, pirates, witches, wonderlands, and Batman. As mentioned above, though, we can’t all just get along.
There’s no more iconic a nerd division than the idea that there are Star Wars fans and Star Trek fans and that’s that. If you like one, you can’t possibly like the other. In fact, you have to hate the other. And, at first glance, I can understand why. Star Wars features a galaxy where everything is dirty, and mismatched, and the bad guys are a crisp, regimented government. Star Trek is about guys who work in a crisp, clean government who try to bring order to various gritty dirty aliens. But, just like it’s possible to like baseball and hockey, it’s pretty easy to like both. (For one thing, in this day and age, who doesn’t like Star Wars?) Where you can actually find some serious, blood thirsty, extra crispy divisions is within Trek fandom.
A brief history lesson – Gene Roddenberry begat Star Trek, and it was good. Kirk, Spock and the rest of the crew traveled from planet to planet meeting babes, fighting Klingons, and dealing with metaphors for all of the problems from the sixties. There was a short-lived animated series, the less said about it the better. After a break of a decade or so, we were introduced to The Next Generation who had a weak start, but ended up providing some of the greatest hours of sci-fi on television. Spinning out of that came something unique in Star Trek lore, a serialized space-opera set on the space station Deep Space Nine. Next, we joined the first lady captain who took us on a long slog through the Delta Quadrant. And, finally, they Quantum Leaped us back in time to the very first ship with the name Enterprise.
How these five (six) shows are ranked determines whether one Trekkie will get along with another. To the layperson, this must seem very silly. I mean, they are all so closely tied together that three of them feature ships named Enterprise. Even when the show doesn’t have an Enterprise, there’s some sort of Enterprise cameo. (DS9 literally had the Enterprise-D appear in it, and Voyager had appearances by Geordi, Troi, Riker and Barclay from Next Generation and Sulu and Janice Rand from The Original Series.) But, unless you really watch them, you can’t appreciate just how different they all are.
Now, I’d love to say something like, “Why can’t we all just get along!?” But, I can’t do it. Like a true Trekkie, I have my own ranking. I’m a little trepidatious to actually reveal it, because I don’t want to alienate any Trekkie readers I might have who feel differently, but here goes.
- Star Trek: The Next Generation
- Star Trek: Deep Space Nine
- Star Trek
- Star Trek: Voyager
- Enterprise
I’ll get into the reasons in the next week or two, but I will say this – I haven’t seen that much of Enterprise. I tried to get into it when it started, and I just couldn’t do it. So, if you think there are some episodes that I should watch to change these rankings, post them in the comments.
Graham Becksted has been watching a lot of Star Trek lately and he’s got a lot to say. He is the author of Graham’s Grumbles the second blog by that name that is listed in Google results when you search for Graham’s Grumbles. If you would like to be his 62nd follower (thank you, bots), he can be followed on Twitter @GrahamBecksted.
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Tagged Deep Space Nine, Enterprise, Nerds, Next Generation, Roddenberry, Star Trek, Voyager
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