posted Thursday, October 08, 2009 - 01:52 PM (#49592)
It was a real pleasure to see you again, too, Brad! I missed the big after party, but I will have to make sure I do so next year. Hopefully we can grab a drink together.
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Mid-Ohio-Con storiesin Conventions by GuigarTuesday, October 06, 2009 - 11:28 PM Whoever said "getting there is half the fun" had no idea what I went through to get to Columbus last weekend to attend Mid-Ohio-Con.The Thursday before the convention weekend, my wife and I noticed that the turn signal had stopped working in our Saturn SL1. I, of course, declared that we could not drive the family to Ohio with the car in that state because it would be a Safety Issue. So my wife took the car to the dealership to get the vehicle fixed Friday morning. On the day that the news broke that Saturn was officially being closed down. They diagnosed the problem -- a bad fuse box -- and made the fix. When we got on the road, we didn't have a care in the world. The plan was to drop Caroline and the boys off at my in-laws and for me to get up early Saturday morning and head off to Columbus. Around dusk, I noticed that my dashboard lights weren't working. But, not problem. I have an iPhone, and the iPhone has an app for everything. Every few minutes, I'd flip on the Flashlight app and check my gauges to make sure I wasn't going too far over the speed limit. Later we pulled into a rest stop for a coffee break around nine o'clock, and a car came screeching in behind us. A man ambled over from the sedan and motioned outside my window: "We've been following you for the last ten miles. You don't have any brake lights or taillights whatsoever! And in the driving rain, you're awfully hard to see." So there we were. No taillights. No brake lights. In pitch darkness. Plus rain. In Breezewood, Pennsylvania. If you're not familiar with Pennsylvania, let me help you out. It's Pittsburgh on one end, Philadelphia on the other, and Alabama in the middle. We were in Mobile. We didn't have too much choice. We turned our hazards on and nursed the car through the darkness. For the next four hours. If I never hear "blink-blink, blink-blink, blink-blink" for the rest of my life, it will be too soon. We arrived at the in-laws at one o'clock a.m. I rented a car online, and awoke at six to have my wife drive me to the airport to pick up the car, bring it back, re-pack my convention materials, and get on the road for Columbus. My wife called from the mechanics a few hours later. It was the fuse box that had been supposedly fixed the day before. Good NeighborsI arrived on the convention floor only about twenty minutes or so late. And my mood immediately improved when I saw who my neighbors were. On my left was Tony Miello, whom I met a couple weekends earlier in line to meet Stan Lee in Pittsburgh. To my right was Bryan Miller, whom I met at New York Comic Con when I taped a brief interview about his book, "How I Became a Super-Villain." To Brian's right was Jeremiah Witkowski whose delightful comic I'm familiar with. And even though he wasn't a neighbor per se, I was happy to see the familiar face of Dean Stahl as well.Ghost Rider's in the
So, with my demeanor buoyed by the presence of cool creators and even cooler fans who came out to say hi, I decided to take a quick walk around the floor to pick up some souvenirs for the boys. Along the way, a wonderful only-in-comics story unfolded. |
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