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Doug Vs Chuck Over Mile High At San Diego Comic-Con

Earlier this month, Chuck Rozanski of Mile High Comics wrote about how he was not going to San Diego Comic-Con for the first time in decades as it was no longer about the comics. How the money wasn't there. And how they had labourers sitting around the entire day last year while the show was unable to deliver the contents of their booth where they needed to be.

 

 

Well, Douglas Paszkiewicz, Arsenic Lullabies creator and upcoming artist on The Tick has written a response on his own mailing list, and has allowed Bleeding Cool to reproduce much of it. He writes…

I've met Chuck a couple of times, seems like good people, I like the cut of his jib and there may be more to the story…but I can't comment on information he didn't include. And the story, as he writes it…is unfair.

Let's start with the merch not getting there…

"The final straw, however, was the utter indifference of the San Diego Comic-Con management to the fiasco that we endured at the beginning of last year's show, when the freight handlers that they hired failed to deliver our comics to our booth. "

"Our trucker was in line at the convention marshaling yard at 6:30 AM on Tuesday morning. At 9 PM that evening, with almost all the other vendors around us unpacked and completely set up, we still did not have our 40,000 lbs of freight. I had twelve workers scheduled to help us set up that day (included Will, Lynne, and Norrie who flew in from Denver that morning…), but all we could do was to sit around all day in our totally empty booth. "

First off, CCI isn't in charge of freight, Freeman is ( the contractors that handle this for the convention center), and CCI has little to no say in Freeman being used because contractors are contracted to a convention center NOT to the convention of the week that is at that center. So this fiasco has little to nothing to do with how CCI is run.

Also, there's something missing here…when you ship stuff directly to the convention center, you can either have Freeman deliver it to your booth, or drive up and get it. So…which was it?  He says they had a trucker there at 9am, then says they were waiting for delivery.  Or did the trucker drop off the freight at 9am and Freeman was to deliver it from the yard to the table?

This is important information that's being left out.  Truth be told, I'm fuzzy on the whole thing because I've only done it once…..BECAUSE…it clearly states on the agreement that if Freeman is to deliver it to your booth, it gets there when it gets there.  Meaning what happened to Chuck, is just the way it goes.  And I have seen people waiting around all day for Freeman to deliver the merch every year.  I would have guess'd Chuck had seen this also.

In either case…let's get some perspective here.  the convention center is SEVEN CITY BLOCKS LONG, WITH THOUSANDS OF EXHIBITORS.  Remember the last scene in Raiders of the lost ark? with the giant warehouse? multiply that a few times and that's what Freeman has to sort out and deliver in a matter of days/hours. The logistical challenge is mind boggling.  Chuck says he had 4400 pounds of stuff…multiply that by about 500 other exhibitors…and keep in mind that it's a beehive of activity in that yard and that 4400 pounds of stuff didn't stay together…it got loaded box by box as other peoples stuff was loaded box by box.

I mean…give them break would ya? SOMEONE is going to be waiting until the end for their stuff…this time it was Chuck.

Chuck says his truck was there at 9am on Tuesday…that puts him behind about 50% of the exhibitors who are getting freight, because many of them ship their stuff right to the show rather than drive it up.

So in actuality, if he was one of the last to get his stuff…that's not really that unfair. and about this…. "the utter indifference of the San Diego Comic-Con management to the fiasco that we endured" and this "Making matters much worse, at no time during this ordeal (or during the show) did anyone from the convention management stop by with an apology, an explanation, or even just to commiserate. "

CCI is NOT in charge of freight delivery it's NOT.  So, what are they supposed to apologize for? AND it says in the Freeman contract you might be waiting forever, AND Freeman is contracted by the Convention center.  This is like expecting CCI to apologize for messy bathrooms. and he was offended they didn't stop by to "commiserate"?  Did I read that correctly?  WHAT?!  No Chuck, they probably didn't have time, since they have a seven city block long convention center to fill in 24 hours.  And they probably have their hands full with things going awry that they ARE in charge of.  I mean…what the hell, Chuck?! I love complaining, and I love hearing other people complain, but you're on your own with that. They didn't stop by to "commiserate"…GOOD, that means they were busy doing their jobs.  Now, we've all, in the heat of a rant, said some things that were beyond the pale ( not me…cough…cough) and THAT is beyond the pale.

I sincerely doubt they were "indifferent" anyway. and Chuck has no way of knowing what they were or were not doing behind the scenes, as the last thing they want is empty booth space or people still setting up while the show is opening…so I'd say that's unfair.  Not that I know what they could have done anyway…there is an entire shipping yard full of crap….some of it is yours…wtf are they supposed to do? send someone down there to slow everything down by checking on one exhibitors merch…which, by the the contract, isn't even technically late.

I just…I don't know buddy…if there is more to the story you should come out with it because every exhibitor who's used Freeman is likely scratching their heads in wonder as to how you feel you were wronged

As for the other two points about the cost vs money you can generate and it not being a comic book convention anymore.

Those points have been gone over by myself and others in recent years, but Chuck is in a unique and not enviable position…and I would call it unwise for him to keep going anyway.

He sells back issues out of long boxes.  Him not making enough money at this show is not so much because the show is changing, it is because the world is changing/has changed.  If I want a copy of Nova no.23 …I can go on the internet and order a copy of Nova no.23.  I don't have to search through long boxes at a comic con.  Now, there is a certain joy in just flipping through a long box and seeing what strikes you, and bringing something home you didn't know you wanted…but not at a larger show and defiantly not at this show.  There…in walking distance, is nearly every living comic book pro, every single publisher, movie studios, celebrity panels, sneak previews of movies and video games…I mean..I don't have to tell you all the stuff there is to do there…there is no time to peruse a bunch of long boxes to see what you see.

He complains about the foot traffic and post a picture of the isle on Saturday .

Doug Vs Chuck Over Mile High At San Diego Comic-Con

A comment and picture I find irrelevant since there could have been ten thousand people in that isle and they wouldn't have stopped to look through long boxes of comics instead of going to meet some guy who actually draws the comics.

He mentions his booth cost at $18,000, which doesn't include travel, hotel, shipping and incidentals.  Think about how many impulse buys you have to get per hour to reach 18,000 by the end of the weekend.

He mentions the price keeps going up…and it does.  and it will until CCI can't get people to pay it.  That day is coming, but personally, I don't blame them. They worked hard and built a show that has a tremendous, unparalleled value to exhibit at.  For the cost of my booth (which also keeps going up) I am an exhibitor at the largest comic-con in the US, the most notable comic-con in the world, exposed to every manner of professional and fans from every conceivable genre, and medium.  I'm building a brand, that what this show is good for, building something. If you're trying to sell back issues or sell merch that isn't in and of itself innovative, based on properties that you don't own, then yeah…this show has turned into something that's probably not going to be worth you setting up at.

I can't think of a worse venue for Chuck to set up shop to sell back issues of comic books, and I'm glad for him he decided to stop going, he was wasting his money and time and aggravating himself needlessly. but I don't think it's fair for him to take jabs at CCI on the way out.

If a tornado hit your town and you went to the red cross or FEMA and said you needed them to manage 160,000 people in a 7 city block long building for five days…they tell you that you're screwed.  yet CCI pulls it off every year.

I'll be there this year at booth 2200, come say hello…and spend some money, eh? I'll be there all five days sketching and signing autographs and being charming…or surly.

Doug Vs Chuck Over Mile High At San Diego Comic-Con

 

 


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Rich JohnstonAbout Rich Johnston

Founder of Bleeding Cool. The longest-serving digital news reporter in the world, since 1992. Author of The Flying Friar, Holed Up, The Avengefuls, Doctor Who: Room With A Deja Vu, The Many Murders Of Miss Cranbourne, Chase Variant. Lives in South-West London, works from Blacks on Dean Street, shops at Piranha Comics. Father of two. Political cartoonist.
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