Creating Things People Love

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I finished up my tour on the Serenity today with watching the feature film spawned from the Firefly series. I meant to watch it last night, but got some ideas for a character and did some drawing instead. After watching the film, I decided to watch the extra features, even though I saw them when the DVD was new, just to be reminded of some things.

One of the great themes in the Firefly TV series is freedom. It's about not being under the heel of anyone. That's what the Serenity represents to her crew, her captain and, I think, to Joss Whedon, the show's creator as well. This is an idea really brought home in the series episode titled Out of Gas, which shows how the characters and crew came to be together. This idea permeates the extra features on the Serenity feature DVD as well. The movie that defied the system and yet lives. I think there is a spark somewhere in that idea that is very attractive to people. I think there is spark which leads to all things that makes Serenity and the Firefly universe something people can fall in love with.

One of the things Joss Whedon talks about in the extra features, concerning the fans and the San Diego Comic-Con, is that his goal is not to create things people like, but things people love. The scenes from Comic-Con show that he greatly succeeded. This is really what I have always wanted to do. This is what I am hoping to do with iPhone Alchemy. I am hoping it is my freedom.

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Imagine taking a boat, that you own, out into the black... no one telling you where to be or what to do. All that open space is yours. You are free, free to come and go as you please, to travel where the win takes you. The internet can open such a door for content creators. You have a whole world out there searching for something new, searching for good content. They are searching for something they can fall in love with. On the net, the creation of that thing is anyone's game. It's not just "the alliance" of media conglomerates and studios and distributors who control what is available in other fields.

This is why I am excited about iPhone Manga and the possibilities here. It's my chance to create and, more fully, create things people love. This is something I have dreamed of for a long time, as far back as when I was on the floor drawing comics through my spiral notebooks for school as a child. I just wanted to create something people loved then too. Now, with iPhone Manga, it may just be that I can not only create it, but the means are there for so many to see it as well. That sounds like freedom to me.
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Our Favorite Shows as iPhone Manga?

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Last night I was watching Joss Whedon's epic sci fi series Firefly, finishing up the series for the first time. I has seen a few episodes when it aired and was given no real chance to find an audience, so I knew the characters well enough to truly enjoy the feature film Serenity (which I will be viewing again tonight). Still, I had never before watched the entire series straight through. It was great to see more of these characters in action as, for me, it was like watching new material with the characters I liked from the movie. When something is truly as enjoyable as this, though, you have to ask, "Is that it? Is this all we get?"

According to Publisher's Weekly, that's not the case. "The sci-fi western about a group of rogue space travelers started out in 2002 as a TV series called Firefly, but it was canceled after only 11 episodes. Whedon then managed the impressive task of bringing the property back to life as a feature film called Serenity."

"And he’s not done with it yet. In November Dark Horse is releasing a hardcover collection of the Serenity: Those Left Behind miniseries he co-wrote in 2005, and he’s already got another miniseries in the works for early 2008."

As with Buffy, Whedon's characters and universe can remain alive in the world of comics. In this world he has more control and because it doesn't have the cost constraints of a major TV series or feature film, it can keep going. While there's no word on a mobile content version of the firefly comic, so it may not be coming to an iPhone near you just yet, with the growth of the mobile content market, it's only a matter of time, right?
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MOBILE MANGA

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Mobile manga is already a huge industry in Japan, servicing the nearly 80 million mobile users to be found there. This is only the beginning. Mobile networks are growing globally and users are ever joining the expanding mobile universe. In fact, some see mobile content as the future of many forms of entertainment.

In Japan where manga and doujinshi (usually amateur, self published comic works) are huge, the mobile content market has opened entirely new doors of liberation. First, there's the elimination of printing costs, a serious obstacle for the indie artist. This also opens the door to full color works. Second, the issue of distribution is quickly solved because the works become only a click away as opposed to the difficulty of retail outlets, which are nearly impossible for the indie to get in. Limited shelf space becomes a thing of the past.

In the American comics market this becomes an even greater possibility. The American comic market is a world where distributors rule, retailers suffer, many going out of business at steady pace, and the publishers and creators are forced to play whatever hand they are given. All of this can be swept away in an all digital and mobile world.

Of course I don't expect this huge transformation to happen anytime soon. It's going to start small. With devices like the iPhone, though, featuring a revolutionary touch screen and beautiful color rendering, a new space is opening for mobile manga. New creators can get in, creating even specific iPhone manga, and have a huge and ever growing audience awaiting their work. The cost of color is no more. The cost of print extinct. Distribution is under control of the creator if that is the desire. With iPhone manga, or mobile content in general, it's a whole new world.
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