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C2E2 2019 Photos #1: Paul Rudd! From “Clueless” and Marvel and Stuff!

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Paul Rudd!

We did not plan to have the same expression. This means we’re now honorary twins.

It’s that time again! My wife Anne and I just got home from the tenth annual Chicago Comic and Entertainment Exposition (“C2E2″), another three-day extravaganza of comic books, actors, creators, toys, props, publishers, freebies, Funko Pops, anime we don’t recognize, and walking and walking and walking and walking. Each year C2E2 keeps inching ever closer to its goal of becoming the Midwest’s answer to the legendary San Diego Comic Con and other famous conventions in larger, more popular states. We missed the first year, but have attended every year since 2011 as a team.

(Useless pedantic note: this was the tenth annual C2E2. It was not C2E2’s tenth anniversary. The inaugural edition was in 2010; therefore, their tenth anniversary will fall in 2020, with the show’s 11th edition. Thank you for listening to today’s episode of my Commemorative Math Pet Peeves podcast.)

One of this year’s largest attractions was arguably its least geek-themed event: a reunion of four of the costars from Amy Heckerling’s 1995 comedy classic Clueless. In the house this weekend were Alicia Silverstone (Batman & Robin), Donald Faison (Scrubs), previous C2E2 attendee Breckin Meyer (Garfield), and certified young legend Paul Rudd. You might remember him from such Marvel Cinematic Universe films as Ant-Man, Ant-Man and the Wasp, Ant-Man Goes to Monte Carlo, and Ant-Man Versus Godzilla. Anne and I are even fonder of his short-term stint on Parks & Recreation as Pawnee city-council candidate Bobby Newport, the friendliest scion of any candy empire ever. We loved it so much that we were this close to investing in Bobby Newport campaign T-shirts just for this photo.

Instead we decided to do our thing. Longtime MCC readers are well aware that our favorite photo-op theme at any comic-con and comic-con-shaped affair is jazz hands. Interested viewers can check out the collection to date on my dedicated Pinterest board. Hence the pose in our lead photo. Sure, we could’ve brought props, like the group of fans ahead of us in line who brought Baskin-Robbins aprons and visors for their photo, and thoughtfully brought a set for the A-lister to don alongside them. But we went with our own direction instead.

To be honest, if I may say so, this wasn’t even our best jazz-hands photo of the weekend.

To be continued! Other chapters in this special MCC miniseries:

Part 2: David Tennant!
Part 3: Marvel and DC Cosplay
Part 4: Disney and Star Wars Cosplay
Part 5: Last Call for Cosplay
Part 6: Artists Alley Plus
Part 7: Who Else We Met, What Else We Did
Part 8: Geek Commerce on Parade


C2E2 2019 Photos #2: David Tennant!

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David Tennant!

The Tenth Doctor is very, very in.

Previously on Midlife Crisis Crossover:

It’s that time again! My wife Anne and I just got home from the tenth annual Chicago Comic and Entertainment Exposition (“C2E2″), another three-day extravaganza of comic books, actors, creators, toys, props, publishers, freebies, Funko Pops, anime we don’t recognize, and walking and walking and walking and walking. Each year C2E2 keeps inching ever closer to its goal of becoming the Midwest’s answer to the legendary San Diego Comic Con and other famous conventions in larger, more popular states. We missed the first year, but have attended every year since 2011 as a team…

…and often pose for jazz-hands photos as a team. To wit: our special moment with David Tennant. You might remember him from such shows as Doctor Who, Jessica Jones, Broadchurch, and more. Technically this moment should’ve happened sooner — Tennant was originally scheduled as a guest at Wizard World Chicago 2017 but had to cancel on the day-of for understandable, serious reasons. Frankly, I was worried he’d have to cancel again, but he thankfully didn’t encounter the same work-visa issues that have hindered the plans of other would-be convention guests from overseas over the past few weeks. For us, this photo therefore represents relief, fandom fulfilled, and extremely delayed gratification.

This quick entry also represents a stalling technique. Right now I’m dead on my feet from the three-hour drive home, only partly unpacked, and faced with the fun chore of sorting several dozen photos for posting ASAP before the C2E2 zeitgeist wears off. But a nap first might be lovely. Until I can get my head back on straight, please enjoy this glimpse of Tennant, who immediately got “jazz hands” without a single bit of coaching or waiting for us to go first.

To be continued! Other chapters in this special MCC miniseries:

Part 1: Paul Rudd! From “Clueless” and Marvel and Stuff!
Part 3: Marvel and DC Cosplay
Part 4: Disney and Star Wars Cosplay
Part 5: Last Call for Cosplay
Part 6: Artists Alley Plus
Part 7: Who Else We Met, What Else We Did
Part 8: Geek Commerce on Parade

C2E2 2019 Photos, Part 3: Marvel and DC Cosplay

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Thor family!

Friday in Asgard: Thor, Odin (with Huginn and Muninn!), Malekith and Hela.

Previously on Midlife Crisis Crossover:

It’s that time again! My wife Anne and I just got home from the tenth annual Chicago Comic and Entertainment Exposition (“C2E2″), another three-day extravaganza of comic books, actors, creators, toys, props, publishers, freebies, Funko Pops, anime we don’t recognize, and walking and walking and walking and walking. Each year C2E2 keeps inching ever closer to its goal of becoming the Midwest’s answer to the legendary San Diego Comic Con and other famous conventions in larger, more popular states. We missed the first year, but have attended every year since 2011 as a team…

…and do our best to take cosplay photos as a team. we’re fans of costumes and try to keep an eye out for heroes, villains, antiheroes, supporting casts, and various oddities that look impressive and/or we haven’t seen at other cons. First up: a great big batch of characters from assorted iterations of the worlds of Marvel and DC Comics, from their movies and shows as well as their comics. Caveats for first-time visitors to Midlife Crisis Crossover:

1. My wife and I are not professional photographers, nor do we believe ourselves worthy of press passes. These were taken as best as possible with the intent to share with fellow fans out of a sincere appreciation for the works inspired by the heroes, hobbies, artistic expressions, and/or intellectual properties that brought us geeks together under one vaulted roof for the weekend. We did what we could with the tools and circumstances at hand. We don’t use selfie sticks, tripods, or cameras that cost more than a month’s worth of groceries.

2. It’s impossible for any human or organization to capture every costume on hand. What’s presented in this series will be a fraction of a fraction of a fraction of a fraction of the sum total costume experience. Other corners of the internet will represent those other fractions that we missed, which is the cool part of having so many people doing this sort of thing.

3. We didn’t attend Sunday. As previously explained at excessive length, we also nearly never do costume contests anymore. Sincere apologies to anyone we missed as a result.

4. Corrections and comments are always welcome, especially when we get to Part 5, which will include at least two characters we young geezers didn’t recognize. I do like learning new names and universes even if you’re more immersed in them than I am.

5. Enjoy!

Loki and Thor!

Loki and Thor bid you welcome to C2E2!

Heimdall!

Normally welcoming you would be Heimdall’s job, but this isn’t Asgard and it’s his day off.

Mera!

Also big at the movies: Mera, star of Aquaman.

Aquaman and Mera!

Aquaman and Mera vacationing on the surface world and enjoying some of its libations.

Spider-Gwen and Spider-Man Noir!

Differently big at the movies: Spider-Gwen and Spider-Man Noir, part of this year’s Spiderverse cosplay explosion.

Spider-Ham!

Also from Spiderverse and my childhood: Peter Porker, the spectacular Spider-Ham.

tiny Spidey!

The itsy-bitsy Spidey climbed up the Marvel stage.

Negative Man!

Meanwhile on TV: Negative Man from the Doom Patrol.

Mr. Terrific!

Mr. Terrific, star of TV’s Arrow.

Daredevil with Braille sign!

Meanwhile not on TV: Daredevil. The second word in his Braille sign is “DISNEY”.

Infinity Gauntlet!

Once again the Infinity Gauntlet stands out from the crowd, and thankfully too big to snap.

Fred Flintpool!

Fred Flintpool, somehow the only Deadpool variant we braked for. We’re losing our touch.

Kon-El!

Kon-El, a.k.a. Superboy, sporting his totally ’90s gear from that time he helped replace Superman while he was dead.

Bat-Villains!

Mandatory Bat-Villains: Professor Hugo Strange, Poison Ivy, and the Scarecrow.

Thor Family 2!

Saturday in Asgard: Thor and Odin return, but Hela is now Malekith, and the previous Malekith is now Beta Ray Bill, armed with Stormbreaker. The family that Norse together is a force together.

To be continued! Other chapters in this special MCC miniseries:

Part 1: Paul Rudd! From “Clueless” and Marvel and Stuff!
Part 2: David Tennant!
Part 4: Disney and Star Wars Cosplay
Part 5: Last Call for Cosplay
Part 6: Artists Alley Plus
Part 7: Who Else We Met, What Else We Did
Part 8: Geek Commerce on Parade

C2E2 2019 Photos, Part 4: Disney and Star Wars Cosplay

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Mayor of Halloween Town!

The Mayor of Halloween Town from Henry Selick’s Tim Burton’s The Nightmare Before Christmas, looking on the verge of abusing his power.

Previously on Midlife Crisis Crossover:

It’s that time again! My wife Anne and I just got home from the tenth annual Chicago Comic and Entertainment Exposition (“C2E2″), another three-day extravaganza of comic books, actors, creators, toys, props, publishers, freebies, Funko Pops, anime we don’t recognize, and walking and walking and walking and walking. Each year C2E2 keeps inching ever closer to its goal of becoming the Midwest’s answer to the legendary San Diego Comic Con and other famous conventions in larger, more popular states. We missed the first year, but have attended every year since 2011 as a team…

…and enjoyed the company of cosplayers as a team. With the same provisos and intro as our previous chapter, please enjoy a smaller but equally creative sampling of the cosplayers on hand who celebrated the various other universes that share Marvel’s megalithic corporate umbrella.


Mary Poppins!

Mary Poppins Generation One.

Me and Mary Poppins!

Me and Mary Poppins Returns, one of many fellow fans we enjoyed lining up and chatting with throughout our weekend.

Darth Revan!

Darth Revan, still fighting on behalf of the Star Wars Expanded Universe.

Villainesses!

Disney villains and their amazing friends.

Ursula!

Ursula, taking a few minutes’ breather from conquering and terrorizing and whatnot.

Han Soul-O!

They call him Han SOUL-O!

Jafar!

Jafar, would-be emperor of the universe with the aid of a teeny Genie.

Edna Mode!

Edna Mode from The Incredibles, whom it pains to be surrounded by so many fashion faux pas.

Miss Piggy and Darth Maul!

Miss Piggy and Darth Maul: can their love bridge the gap between their two worlds?

Mayor of Halloween Town!

If they catch him in the right mood, the Mayor of Halloween Town might be more than happy to officiate that wedding.

To be continued! Other chapters in this special MCC miniseries:

Part 1: Paul Rudd! From “Clueless” and Marvel and Stuff!
Part 2: David Tennant!
Part 3: Marvel and DC Cosplay
Part 5: Last Call for Cosplay
Part 6: Artists Alley Plus
Part 7: Who Else We Met, What Else We Did
Part 8: Geek Commerce on Parade

C2E2 2019 Photos, Part 5 of 8: Last Call for Cosplay

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Calvin and Hobbes!

Calvin and Hobbes, complete with Watterson-accurate expression.

Previously on Midlife Crisis Crossover:

It’s that time again! My wife Anne and I just got home from the tenth annual Chicago Comic and Entertainment Exposition (“C2E2″), another three-day extravaganza of comic books, actors, creators, toys, props, publishers, freebies, Funko Pops, anime we don’t recognize, and walking and walking and walking and walking. Each year C2E2 keeps inching ever closer to its goal of becoming the Midwest’s answer to the legendary San Diego Comic Con and other famous conventions in larger, more popular states. We missed the first year, but have attended every year since 2011 as a team…

…and sooner or later we run out of cosplay photos as a team. It’s time to share all the cosplay that’s fit to print and left to post. Same disclaimers apply as in Part Two. Enjoy! Some more!


Big Brother and Big Sister!

Two of my favorite video game villains, Big Brother and Big Sister from the Bioshock series.

Macho Man Randy Savage!

Macho Man Randy Savage, questing for his Miss Elizabeth.

Hello Kitty Pez dispenser!

Hello Kitty Pez dispenser, for fans of strangers with candy.

Shaun of the Dead!

Shaun of the Dead, who insisted it’s not a hard costume to pull off. Even so, a key part of effective cosplay is commitment and follow-through.

Pac-Man!

Pac-Man, representing on behalf of an exhibit hall vendor. Call him a “Booth Ball”.

Missing Link!

Also shilling on the show floor: Sir Lionel and Susan, each voiced by Hugh Jackman and Zach Galifianakis in the upcoming Laika animated film Missing Link.

T-Rex skeleton!

If you’ve ever been to a con where dozens of those inflatable orange T-Rex costumes wander around, this cosplayer aimed to get into the role more than skin-deep.

Intermission:

At most cons we end up with a small selection of photos I like to call “Stump the Olds”, in which we share photos of costumes that we thought looked somewhere between fancy and ingenious, and we took their picture even though we have absolutely no idea what character we’re looking at. If someone recognizes any of our next three subjects and can broaden our horizons by identifying them, that would be tremendously appreciated. I’m not quite satisfied with posting blind, unlabeled, anonymous cosplay pics even though thousands of convention-cosplay photogs super-love doing exactly that on Instagram all the time. I aspire to be at least a smidgen better than that if someone’ll help cure my ignorance. Much obliged!

armored warrior!

Golden armored warrior knight soldier with a potentially evil halo.

Spider Queen!

Evil mecha crab spider queen destroyer and whatnot.

Evil Tree Queen!

What if Mother Nature got sick of humanity and created her own mystical evil-tree armor to come rain natural sorcery revenge upon us all.

Pikachu!

Back to easy, familiar pop-culture territory with Pikachu. Pika pika! See, him I know.

Detective Pikachu & Ash!

Same Pokemon, movie variant, with his old buddy Ash. We’ll come back to Detective Pikachu in a later chapter.

Underdog and Simon Bar Sinister!

More faces for us middle-age fans to recognize on sight: TV’s Underdog and Simon Bar Sinister!

Bumblebee!

Bumblebee from the original Transformers. Calling them “Generation One” just makes me feel ancient, so let’s not.

Waluigi Army!

Teaser photo from next summer’s smash epic Waluigi: Into the Waluigiverse.

Dancing Goku Black!

Dancing Goku Black and friends out in the C2E2 lobby.

Jeannie!

The genie Jeannie, our last cosplay photo of the weekend before we returned to our hotel and collapsed.

To be continued! Other chapters in this special MCC miniseries:

Part 1: Paul Rudd! From “Clueless” and Marvel and Stuff!
Part 2: David Tennant!
Part 3: Marvel and DC Cosplay
Part 4: Disney and Star Wars Cosplay
Part 6: Artists Alley Plus
Part 7: Who Else We Met, What Else We Did
Part 8: Geek Commerce on Parade

Calvin and Hobbes again!

COSPLAY STRONG!

C2E2 2019 Photos, Part 6 of 8: Artists Alley Plus

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Afua Richardson!

Elegantly dressed as Ramonda, Queen Mother of Wakanda, artist Afua Richardson (World of Wakanda, Genius) made the rest of us on the premises look like slobs.

Previously on Midlife Crisis Crossover:

It’s that time again! My wife Anne and I just got home from the tenth annual Chicago Comic and Entertainment Exposition (“C2E2″), another three-day extravaganza of comic books, actors, creators, toys, props, publishers, freebies, Funko Pops, anime we don’t recognize, and walking and walking and walking and walking. Each year C2E2 keeps inching ever closer to its goal of becoming the Midwest’s answer to the legendary San Diego Comic Con and other famous conventions in larger, more popular states. We missed the first year, but have attended every year since 2011 as a team…

…and traipse together through their Artists Alley, consistently the best assemblage of comic book creators available in any large-scale Midwest entertainment convention. Scores of writers, artists, colorists, editors, and otherwise collaborative bookmakers gather in lengthy rows, some narrower than others, and tempt me to spend and spend and spend on new reading material, or at least brake for autographs on items I previously bought and brought along for the ride. This year was naturally no exception, which is why — more than jazz hands, more than the cosplay, definitely more than publishers’ freebies — Artists Alley is my favorite part of every C2E2.

Presented in order of meeting, because it’s easier for me to think that way:

Voracious Team!

Markisan Naso and Jason Muhr, the writer/artist team behind the Jurassic-cooking SF epic Voracious. I met Naso last year at C2E2, loved Volume 1, and had to brake for Volume 2.

Kyle Starks!

Kyle Starks, Rick and Morty comics purveyor and co-creator of the new Image action series Assassination Nation.

Erica Henderson!

Starks’ Assassination Nation partner-in-crime Erica Henderson, trying something extremely different from Unbeatable Squirrel Girl. We previously met at C2E2 2017.

Cecil Castellucci!

Poet/musician Cecil Castellucci, writer of the recently concluded DC/Young Animal title Shade the Changing Girl/Woman. She’s now got a Female Furies miniseries in progress.

Jeremy Whitley!

A survivor of the poorly attended Awesome Con Indy 2014 like us, Jeremy Whitley is the creator of the feminist fairy-tale series Princeless and currently getting a fair amount of press coverage for his work on Marvel’s Unstoppable Wasp, in which we recently learned our young heroine is bipolar.

Manning and Rostan!

Table mates still reeling from their convention debut at the previous weekend’s Emerald City Comic Con. Shaun Manning brought along a few graphic novels he’s written, including the Morrissey-referencing Interesting Drug. Andrew Rostan was a five-time Jeopardy! champion who’s just released an autobiographic novel about his experience appropriately called Form of a Question, which should fit neatly on the shelf next to Ken Jennings’ Brainiac.

Ben Dewey!

I somehow missed that artist Ben Dewey (The Autumnlands, Beasts of Burden) was even on the guest list. Anne will testify I sped over the very minute I saw his table, naturally covered in fine arts.

Stephanie Hans!

The longest Artists Alley line we waited in belonged to Stephanie Hans, painter of Kieron Gillen’s new Image series DIE. As previously promised, I absolutely have to write about my reaction to it at length sometime.

Domo Stanton!

After catching him on a Friday panel, we kicked off my second Artists Alley run-through on Saturday with a stop for Domo Stanton, now drawing the new DC/Vertigo series House of Whispers.

Alison Wilgus!

Editor/creator Alison Wilgus celebrated the release of her new OGN Chronin (part 1 of 2), involving time travel to 19th-century Japan.

Tini Howard!

Announced as snagging herself a Marvel exclusive contract this same weekend, writer Tini Howard (Euthanauts, Thanos) will be bringing back Death’s Head, arguably the best thing ever to have come out of Marvel UK.

Arthur Adams!

Con attendees were shocked to hear of the hospitalization of C2E2 guest Joyce Chin on Saturday morning. Many of us lined up to offer kind words and wads of cash to her husband, legendary artist Arthur Adams, to whose awesome work at least half the founders of Image Comics owe their artistic careers.

Eve Ewing!

Poet/professor Dr. Eve Ewing signed for a special hour at one of the larger tables over in the celebrity autograph section. Her Marvel series Ironheart is recommended reading, and she’ll be helping with a Marvel Team-Up relaunch soon.

Daniel Kibblesmith!

Lockjaw! Quantum and Woody! Black Panther! Deadpool! Stephen Colbert! These characters and more have had words put in their mouths by Daniel Kibblesmith (well, okay, technically not Lockjaw).

Additional fine folks not pictured above:

  • Tana Ford, artist on the Berger Books SF miniseries LaGuardia written by Nnedi Okorafor. I previously griped here on MCC about how I’d missed #2. It was literally the only back issue I cared about finding at C2E2, and Ford blessedly had copies available.
  • Mike Norton, whom I previously met years ago at Wizard World Chicago (either 2010 or 2011, I forget which), but I picked up an issue of his current series Grumble, which I’d somehow never heard of before this weekend. I miss out on so many projects simply because I refuse to come within 500 yards of comic book message boards, whose constant debates by and large tend to give me abdominal bleeding.
Artists Alley Friday!

My Artists Alley plunder as of 11 a.m. Friday. And then we stopped and had lunch because my back was already hurting from the quickly acquired, heavy load.

Artists Alley Saturday!

All my pretties from making the rounds on Saturday. Next time I must remember to keep our ibuprofen in my bag, not back at the hotel.

My favorite Artists Alley souvenir this year came courtesy of Ben Dewey. I bought a copy of The Complete Collection of the Tragedy Series: Secret Lobster Claws and Other Misfortunes, a hardcover souvenir reprinting the entirety of his rather focused Tumblr. Then he asks me what my favorite animal is. Somehow a confluence of Mike Baron and the Dead Milkmen in my head prompts the answer, “badger”. He whips out a mostly blank bookplate and proceeds over the course of a few quick minutes to adorn my new book with a fully inked and realized image of a most dapper badger, better dressed than I’ve ever been and ever will be.

Badger!

The frame and “FROM THE LIBRARY OF” were preprinted. All else materialized while we watched. I never ask artists for sketches, so I’m blown away whenever this happens unexpectedly.

And these are just folks plying wares at their booths. As if they weren’t enough, we also attended more panels this year than usual and had fun seeing creators on stage…

To be continued! Other chapters in this special MCC miniseries:

Part 1: Paul Rudd! From “Clueless” and Marvel and Stuff!
Part 2: David Tennant!
Part 3: Marvel and DC Cosplay
Part 4: Disney and Star Wars Cosplay
Part 5: Last Call for Cosplay
Part 7: Who Else We Met, What Else We Did
Part 8: Geek Commerce on Parade

C2E2 2019 Photos, Part 7 of 8: Who Else We Met, What Else We Did

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Tyler Hoechlin!

Once again my wife brakes for Superman.

Previously on Midlife Crisis Crossover:

It’s that time again! My wife Anne and I just got home from the tenth annual Chicago Comic and Entertainment Exposition (“C2E2″), another three-day extravaganza of comic books, actors, creators, toys, props, publishers, freebies, Funko Pops, anime we don’t recognize, and walking and walking and walking and walking. Each year C2E2 keeps inching ever closer to its goal of becoming the Midwest’s answer to the legendary San Diego Comic Con and other famous conventions in larger, more popular states. We missed the first year, but have attended every year since 2011 as a team…

…and found activities together as a team. Given that C2E2 is the most comics-centered of all the giant cons we attend each year, its activities often appeal more to me than to her. But we do try to take turns being each other’s plus-one throughout our various cons and travels, so eventually it balances out.

The Friday morning drive from Indianapolis to Chicago was surprisingly free of incident — no massive road construction projects, no traffic accidents, and only minimal delays on the Dan Ryan Expressway, a miracle itself. We dropped off the car in exactly the lot I’d wanted, walked into McCormick Place at 8:30 a.m., and joined the crowd-shaped line awaiting the 10 a.m. exhibit hall opening.

Friday waiting!

Some of us are readier than others.

The benevolent Powers That Be saw fit to begin ushering us in at 9:55. No one said “no”. Our first stop was for an errand on behalf of a friend-of-a-friend who dearly hoped we could locate a specific variant comic sold only by a specific retailer from Fresno making their C2E2 debut. Their booth was on the farthest end of the exhibit hall from the entrance, nearly hidden behind a long line of comic investors waiting their turns at the CGC booth. Many were the dudes hoping to have their most valuable comics’ conditions graded by CGC in hopes of reselling them as authenticated objets d^art, which in turn means they can ask for bigger bucks from their buyers. Not my thing, but I wish them well in profiting off our hobby.

The Fresno folks were super friendly, had exactly the comic we were looking for, and rewarded us with some free Hi-Chew candies. If only California shops came out here more often.

Superhero Girls candy!

They even wrapped their Hi-Chews in whatever themed paper they could get their hands on. Cute and classy!

We shot straight from there to Artists Alley a few rows ahead. One hour later, my bag was full of books and giving me far too much back pain far too soon in this long weekend.

Thus at 11 a.m. we made a radical move: we grabbed lunch. I used to make fun of people who made concession stands their first stops at a con, but the truth is we had no major appointments on our Friday schedule, no photo ops or even any actor autographs in mind for that day. We were free to wander the exhibit hall at our leisure, check out dealers or not check them out as we saw fit. As we keep aging, we realize we need to find excuses to sit down more often if we’re to endure the arduous physical experience that is the typical miles-long, con-walking marathon.

Value-added plus: none of the concession stands had a line. Value-subtracted minus: dreadful prices for mediocre food. Fourteen bucks for a skimpy pastrami sandwich did not impress me. I’ve made better at home with meat from the Walmart deli. I chose poorly.

At 12:30 we attended our first panel: “SuperheroIRL! Join the Real-Life Justice League”. The subject was Pop Culture Hero, a nonprofit dedicated to anti-bullying educational programs and initiatives in a variety of forms and venues, framing their lessons on tolerance and understanding through the lens of superheroes and other mass-media protagonists who know bullying sucks and bullies are The Worst. Leading the panel was PCH cofounder Chase Masterson, best known to us as Leeta the Dabo Girl from Star Trek: Deep Space Nine. (We met her decades ago at a local Trek convention.) Their mission statement, per their website:

Founded in 2013, we are a 501(c)(3) non-profit that takes a stand against bullying, racism, misogyny, cyber-bullying, LGBT-bullying, and other forms of hate,using the phenomenal popularity of media to bring justice and healing.

The Coalition’s work features global experts and advocates, including representatives from the United Nations, the Anti-Defamation League, the NOH8 Campaign, Justice League New York, and other major organizations; we also work with clinical psychologists who specialize in using pop culture stories in restorative justice and in therapy for victims of bullying and injustice.

SuperheroIRL Panel!

Our Heroes.

Participants in the photo, left to right:

  • Max Bever from the Illinois chapter of the ACLU, who hosts a relevant podcast called “Talking Liberties”, which I have to mention for pun value alone.
  • Suzana Flores, a clinical psychologist and author of the upcoming nonfiction book Untamed: The Psychology of Marvel’s Wolverine. She not only dissects the Canadian berserker antihero at length, but at the panel she candidly shared her personal tale of how Wolverine got her through the direst ordeal of her life.
  • Comics and comedy writer Daniel Kibblesmith, about whose talents I’ve previously raved here and here.
  • Mike Strautmanis, a lawyer who worked within President Barack Obama’s adminsitration and is now Vice President of Civic Engagement for the Obama Foundation. Strautmanis detailed the Foundation’s plans to effect social change through the Barack Obama Presidential Center, which, if all goes according to plan, will have its campus built on Chicago’s south side. More than any other panelist, by association alone Strautmanis was treated like the biggest rock star in the room.
  • Actor John Barrowman. You may remember him from such shows as Doctor Who, Torchwood, and TV’s Arrow. He spoke of his own experiences with turning the tables on would-be bullies in his youth and as he got older and better than them.
  • Carrie Goldman, Pop Culture Hero co-founder and author of the book Bullied: What Every Parent, Teacher and Kid Needs to Know About Ending the Cycle of Fear.
  • …and that’s Chase Masterson at the podium.
John Barrowman!

Barrowman was not listed in the program guide and was a pleasant and most welcome surprise guest. His past MCC appearances include Wizard World Chicago 2016 and Motor City Comic Con 2017.

Not pictured but late to the party was comics artist Afua Richardson, whose arrival in resplendent Dora Milaje regalia was impossible to miss and demoted Strautmanis to the second-biggest rock star in the room. She likewise shared her story — which has included bouts of poverty and other tribulations — and dropped words of wisdom, including a pearl from her grandmother (IIRC) that I made a point of writing down: “I allowed what tried to demolish me to polish me.”

Speaking of demolished: sitting down at the panel for an hour helped with our early fatigue onset, but I needed ibuprofen. With Anne shouldering some of my load in her bag, we ventured back to the car, shed a few dozen pounds of reading matter, loaded me up on meds, and returned to the fray, by which I mean walking the exhibit hall, stopping at very few dealers’ booths, picking up freebies from Marvel’s town square, and photographing the occasional cosplayer. We’re the Goldens. This is who we are and what we do.

Shortly before 3 p.m. we wandered over to the live stage in the far, far corner of the exhibit hall and caught a few minutes of sketching with Marc Silvestri, co-founder of Image Comics, head of Top Cow Entertainment, and Uncanny X-Men penciler in my teenage years. Officially we were supposed to be watching him draw Wolverine, but he kept answering questions and amiably chatting, and managed only a rough layout before time was up.

Marc Silvestri!

Silvestri with our host, Syfy Wire’s Angélique Roché. We last saw her at Ace Comic Con Midwest in October.

Shortly after 3:00 came our next event: an Animaniacs reunion! Four voice actors from the original ’90s animated series were in the house and given far too short a time frame to reminisce and crack us up. They had other get-togethers scheduled Saturday and Sunday, but neither of those worked out for us. We’d met LaMarche and Paulsen before (cf. Indiana Comic Con 2016 and Wizard World Chicago 2018), but this was our first exposure to Harnell and MacNeille.

Animaniacs panel!

Maurice LaMarche, Jess Harnell, Tress MacNeille, and Rob Paulsen.

Animaniacs Harnell!

Harnell was the most hyperactive, Simpsons veteran MacNeille was the best dressed, and LaMarche and Paulsen were Pinky and the Brain.

We had grown rather fond of sitting and listening to interesting people, and thereafter made our way to another upstairs panel starring Darryl McDaniel, a.k.a. DMC from Run-DMC, whom I was stunned to meet at C2E2 2017. I cry whenever I have to explain this famous rapper to folks who don’t recognize him. He and his bandmates Run and Jam Master Jay (R.I.P.) were responsible for rap breaking into the mainstream with such hits as “Walk This Way”, “King of Rock”, “My Adidas”, “Tricky”, and the beloved holiday classic “Christmas in Hollis”, a.k.a. Argyle’s theme from Die Hard. And yet sometimes I do still have to explain who he is, which I suppose explains why the room wasn’t packed.

This year DMC headlined his own panel about his company Darryl Makes Comics, for which he has big, ambitious, superhero-filled plans in mind. The panel roster included several of his collaborators, but thanks to the Friday crowds only two of them arrived on time. DMC had plenty to say nonetheless about his background as a comics-loving kid growing up in Queens, his future plans, his hopes, and his reluctance for anyone to label their output “hip-hop comics”. He went on for several minutes about that last part, which really bugged him.

DMC Chu Chen!

Our moderator at far left was Ming Chen, costar of AMC’s Comic Book Men. At far right, pro comics writer Amy Chu, whose first appearance on MCC was at Indiana Comic Con 2015, and whom we met at last year’s C2E2.

DMC Panel!

Joining the discussion were returning guest Afua Richardson — see, I wasn’t kidding about that Dora Milaje armor — and Domo Stanton, artist on DC/Vertigo’s House of Whispers.

DMC art!

One of three pieces of character concept art we got to see, drawn by DMC himself. As he tells it, he learned how to draw during a childhood of comics reading long before rap ever came into his picture.

Chu DMC Afua!

Chu and Richardson flank DMC during a couple minutes of posing after the panel.

We managed to walk a few more rows’ worth of exhibit hall after that before we labeled it To Be Continued and called it a day.

We returned Saturday morning around 8-ish and cheerfully parked in very nearly the same space as the day before. This time they opened the floodgates at shortly after 9:45…

…which is for the best because that crowd grew increasingly massive by the minute, even before opening time. By 11 a.m. Lots A and B were both full; by 12:30, all Saturday-only and 3-day badges were sold out. Fans who attempted arrival beyond that had to settle for parking in Soldier Field or worse. Horror stories abounded, including but not limited to a few fans who’d prepaid for McCormick Place parking in advance — not a small expenditure — only to be told there was no room for them. Not cool.

By mid-afternoon the exhibit hall aisles were just as congested and impassable in places.

Show Floor Saturday!

Imagine how many folks were only wishing they could snap their fingers and erase half the population just for the elbow room.

At 11:00 was our date with destiny, by which I mean our photo op with David Tennant, who was pretty much on time and gifted with a seamless operation. Lining up was easy; moving forward was brisk; photography was on point.

My only complaint is I wish all photo-op companies included digital downloads free with every purchase. The upstanding folks at Celeb Photo Ops spoiled us at both Ace Comic Con Midwest and last December’s Louisville Supercon, where we could share our results online within minutes for the best kind of instant gratification. Meanwhile at C2E2, Epic Photo Ops wanted an extra $10 for their JPEGs. We settled for delayed gratification and sulkily waited till we got home Sunday afternoon to run our photos through our scanner the old-fashioned way like primitive chumps.

(It could be worse, of course. At the upcoming Star Wars Celebration Chicago in two weeks, Topps wants to gouge us an extra $15 per digital copy. I suspect it’ll be that kind of con where flagrant bilking is the norm. Expect our write-up to be extra cranky if that’s the case.)

Before and after Tennant, we tried crossing off more of our routine exhibit hall aisle march. Around noon we stopped for lunch, which was pretzels and cheese. That’s it. We’d had a hearty breakfast in preparation for the day, and figured we’d limit our lunch to a mere modicum of overpriced carbs because wow was I still bitter about those $14 pastrami scraps.

Around 12:30 we headed over to the autograph table of the young gentleman in our lead photo: Tyler Hoechlin, costar of MTV’s Teen Wolf, who — unbeknownst to me till this weekend — got his start as a child actor, who in fact costarred in the film adaptation of the graphic novel Road to Perdition. He played Tom Hanks’ older son, who was actually the main character in the book. Today Anne and I know him better as the guy who’s played Superman in a few episodes of The CW’s Supergirl. Actors who play live-action Superman rank very high on Anne’s meet-and-greet list.

We then returned to the upstairs panel hallway and got turned away not once but twice. DC Comics’ official panel honoring Batman’s 80th anniversary was capped shortly before we reached the door. I’m not buying any Bat-books regularly at the moment anyway, but the invited panelists, which included comics legends Marv Wolfman and George Perez, would’ve been a treat to see on one stage, especially since Perez announced he’ll be retiring from both comics and conventions at the end of 2019.

Running concurrently with the Bat-party was C2E2’s biggest event of the year: a Q&A billed as a cast reunion for the 1995 comedy Clueless. Appearing together live for the first time in decades were star Alicia Silverstone, now-A-lister Paul Rudd, Scrubs funnyman Donald Faison, and Breckin Meyer, whom we spotted briefly at last year’s C2E2 plugging his Crackle animated series SuperMansion. Judging by the major headlines on entertainment websites for the rest of the weekend, the Clueless reunion was officially deemed A Big Deal by newsmakers.

In this case the panel was beyond merely capped. It was held in the largest auditorium in McCormick Place’s South Building, yet filled to capacity anyway. We approached its entrance and found dozens, maybe hundreds of fellow attendees sitting outside the Main Stage doors and watching the panel on TVs mounted around the foyer walls. To us it wasn’t the most ideal viewing space, on screens from a distance behind other people’s heads. We retreated to a pair of abandoned comfy chairs 100 feet away, and relaxed after our early long walks. We couldn’t see the TVs, but we didn’t care that much about Clueless.

Clueless Detective Pikachu!

If you wanted to watch, this was your view. We’ll come back to Detective Pikachu here in a few minutes.

Once we were back up to fighting strength, we steeled ourselves for our other Saturday appointment: our 2:20 photo op with the frequently delightful Paul Rudd. We shuffled toward the photo-op area through the increasingly denser crowds until we reached total, unyielding gridlock among dozens or possibly hundreds of other fans all converging around the same time.

Most cons refuse to let anyone line up for photo ops until thirty minutes before their scheduled op. For those of us who’ve had bad experiences and want to make sure we don’t miss out (exhibit A: last August’s Wizard World Chicago fiasco), it’s a good idea to show up a bit early, mill around the entrance, and wait for your actor’s name to be called when it’s line-up time. Naturally, plenty of us had the same idea simultaneously. Net result: chaos.

One timid con volunteer was equipped with a P.A., but was thoroughly inaudible and buried below dozen of decibels of crowd noise. Another, much younger volunteer without sound equipment stood still and did nothing but plaintively, uselessly shout “AMY JO JOHNSON!” every few minutes to any Power Rangers fans who might be within earshot, which appeared to be zero given the complete lack of response every single time. So we all stood and stood and stood, and stood some more, and failed to move forward.

This, to be frank, is becoming a recurring issue at cons: the photo-op area runs smoothly in the morning, slides a bit behind as stars come and go late throughout the day, and by late afternoon everything’s turned into the running of the bulls at Pamplona if the bulls were packed too tightly to run, trample, or gore anyone, but you know they’re still savoring the thought.

At one point a funny guy wandered into our midst, waiting for his own op with some wrestlers or whatever, and loudly asked the crowd who we were all waiting for. When no one answered at first — I think we as a hivemind were too intent on staring the volunteers to death — he poked fun at the lack of response. For a rare change of pace I thought, “Eh, why not,” and answered him back, using my own extra-loud setting that I extremely rarely wield in public. We proceeded to engage in top-volume, happy-shouty banter, no anger, and amused our neighbors for a moment. Because sometimes it’s good to have a distraction from stress.

Less than five minutes after I directly @’ed C2E2’s official Twitter account and fifteen minutes before our appointed time, two more volunteers, looking much more official and confident and aware that something needed to be done differently immediately, took over the scene and began organizing hundreds of us into official Paul Rudd photo-op lines. It’s entirely possible they were already on their way before I tweeted at them with irritated concern, and that I did not, in fact, personally save the day. All I know is that, as a guy with thirty years in the customer service industry, I recognize when a company is doing a stupendously crappy job of it and needs a healthy slapping.

Eventually we got our turn with Mr. Rudd, who looked a bit worn down but nonetheless game for whatever poses were foisted on him.

Then we finished off our show-floor strolls once and for all, grabbed a few more books from Artists Alley, detoured for author Eve Ewing’s 3:00 autograph signing at Table 39 in the celebrity area (no mere Artists Alley space for her!), and returned upstairs yet again for one final panel, on an baseless whim that happened because curiosity got the best of me.

Titled “Marvel’s Next Big Thing”, Editor-in-Chief C.B. Cebulski presided over announcements regarding Marvel’s upcoming major projects for the next six months or so. I’d learned in advance this would include confirmation of the next assignment for acclaimed grandmaster Jonathan Hickman, who previously wrote Avengers and subsequently Fantastic Four in a manner that effectively turned his runs on those families of titles into a single, epic-length work with a beginning, middle, and end across several years of comics. So he’s kind of a big deal in the mainstream comics biz. I didn’t follow any of that for long, but I’ve enjoyed his work on his creator-owned titles such as The Manhattan Projects, The Nightly News, and the still-unfinished The Dying and the Dead.

This time we were admitted to the panel before it was capped, though wound up toward the back of the room because we weren’t that early. I’m fine with my choice to meet Eve Ewing first. I wasn’t deeply invested in the proceedings anyway, simply scratching an itch.

Cebulski kicked off the panel with a silly video in which various Marvel staffers and/or freelancers pretended to argue over the critical issue of which pizza is superior, New York or Chicago. (My opinion here is the same as my opinion on “Marvel or DC?”: I’ve found merit in both, and I’ve been disappointed by both.) Then Cebulski brought out his special guests — the aforementioned Hickman, along with writer Jason Aaron (Thor, Conan, Star Wars a while back) and artist Pepe Larraz (Star Wars: Kanan). Thus the announcements began, and I found myself increasingly disengaged as I realized they were mostly talking about X-Men books, which haven’t deeply mattered to me in ages, and which inevitably lead to crossovers, which are even more Not My Thing Anymore.

…and we were dismissed. As a parting gift, all attendees on the way out were handed free copies of Avengers #17 (current series, not the one from 1965) with an exclusive C2E2 variant cover by Mike McKone, featuring Captain America, Spider-Man, Captain Marvel, and Ironheart eating at an anonymous Chicago pizzeria. (It’s neither Giordano’s nor Gino’s East. Beyond that, no idea where they are.)

We returned to the main show level, took one last round of cosplay photos, and considered ourselves officially done and satisfied. We left McCormick Place, we had an incident at a parking garage, and we headed home Sunday morning without further complications.

Meanwhile online Saturday night, the good folks at Twitter Dot Com turned the Clueless reunion into a “Twitter Moment”. That’s a device that a Twitter curator will use to create “In Case You Missed It” news summaries by compiling tweets from various users and turning them into temporary threads of sorts for anyone and everyone to view at their leisure if they so choose. Instead of hiring journalists to write paragraphs, they effectively let users tell the story for them.

This time, the benevolent curator chose one of my throwaway tweets to tell a specific part of the Clueless reunion story.

As with 99.9% of my tweets, I had expected it would sink into the Twitter morass and never matter to anyone ever. Thanks to the cast of Clueless and the magic of Twitter, my “Detective Pikachu, Clueless fan” tweet became the .1%. My notifications figuratively had my phone ringing off the hook the rest of Saturday night, all day Sunday, and for half the day Monday. The total viewer “impressions” garnered by that lone, frivolous tweet soon surpassed Midlife Crisis Crossover’s cumulative seven-year traffic history. At my present traffic levels it will take MCC years a good 3-5 years to catch up with that one tweet.

This wasn’t merely My Most Popular Tweet of All Time. This tweet was, as far as I am aware, the Most Popular Thing I Have Ever Done in My Entire 46 Years of Living, Period.

I mean, it’s cool that something I did amused such a large audience. But if I dwell on it for more than a few minutes, it also makes me want to stop writing paragraphs forever because why bother in this day and age. Why not line up with the Instagram “influencers” (hate loathe despise HATE that term) and limit my creative efforts to all pictures and no words, and really chase those “impressions” for validation.

But y’know…we’re the Goldens. This is who we are and what we do.

Welcome to C2E2!

At the end of every con, the exciting gateway to adventure becomes the exit back to mediocre mundanity.

To be concluded! Other chapters in this special MCC miniseries:

Part 1: Paul Rudd! From “Clueless” and Marvel and Stuff!
Part 2: David Tennant!
Part 3: Marvel and DC Cosplay
Part 4: Disney and Star Wars Cosplay
Part 5: Last Call for Cosplay
Part 6: Artists Alley Plus
Part 8: Geek Commerce on Parade

C2E2 Photos, Part 8 of 8: Geek Commerce on Parade

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C2E2 Dalek!

This way to REGISTRATE! REGISTRATE! REGISTRATE!

Previously on Midlife Crisis Crossover:

It’s that time again! My wife Anne and I just got home from the tenth annual Chicago Comic and Entertainment Exposition (“C2E2″), another three-day extravaganza of comic books, actors, creators, toys, props, publishers, freebies, Funko Pops, anime we don’t recognize, and walking and walking and walking and walking. Each year C2E2 keeps inching ever closer to its goal of becoming the Midwest’s answer to the legendary San Diego Comic Con and other famous conventions in larger, more popular states. We missed the first year, but have attended every year since 2011 as a team…

…and taken photos as a team, of whatever sights catch our eyes around the vast exhibit hall, which could contain several football games at once, though it does not because football is out of scope for geek mega-parties like C2E2.

In the spirit of the Moral of the Story from our seventh exciting chapter, in which we ultimately learned that photos are cool and words are dumb if you put too many together in a row, please enjoy one last photo gallery of stuff and things that demand your money or at least your attention. Looky!


Into the Badlands!

One of the many events we skipped was an advance screening of the final season premiere of AMC’s Into the Badlands, accompanied by head honchos Alfred Gough and Miles Millar.

Godzilla!

Large-scale replica of the redesigned star of the upcoming summer blockbuster Godzilla: King of the Monsters.

Movie Realization Marvel figures!

New, fancy Marvel/Star Wars
action figures from Tamashii Nations.

Bandai GUNPLA!

GUNPLA! A.k.a. the wonderful world of Gundam models.

Kenner R2D2!

Not just an ordinary astromech droid, but a faithful recreation of the primitive Kenner R2D2 figure that was good enough for us when we were kids.

Savage Avengers!

Decor at the Marvel booth included a banner for the upcoming Savage Avengers, which I presume is like X-Force but for Avengers. If that’s Conan the Barbarian I see on the team there, that’s gonna make for interesting reprint complications if and when Marvel ever relinquishes the Conan license again.

Netflix Daredevil costume!

Marvel also brought actual props from their Netflix shows, such as Daredevil’s costume.

Pop's swear jar!

More props: Misty Knight’s cybernetic prosthetic, the swear jar from Pop’s barber shop (R.I.P.), and the sign from the door of Nelson & Murdock.

DC booth!

Next door, the same-sized DC Comics needs everyone to remember how much they loved the Wonder Woman movie.

Long Live the Bat!

DC was proud to celebrate the 80th anniversary of Batman’s first appearance, celebrated the following Wednesday with the release of Detective Comics #1000, now in stores with loads of variant covers.

Batmen!

Batman Batman Batman: art by Bob Kane, Carmine Infantino (and Murphy Anderson, maybe?), Frank Miller, Jim Lee, and Greg Capullo.

Shudder banner!

C2E2 was brought to you in part by Shudder, the only horror-flick streaming service audacious enough to bring you Nicolas Cage in Mandy.

Cosplayers Welcome!

Cosplay Central contained one of this year’s biggest secrets: the booth for Vero (some social media startup or whatever) brought in special guest Ray Fisher from Justice League. Yes, really. There are photos.

Skeletor cereal!

Nostalgic for cereals that vaguely resembles your favorite characters and taste like Styrofoam shavings? FYE will hook you up, especially if your favorite character is booty.

Blueberries!

Crunchyroll brought giant blueberries with eyes. I’m sure they had their reasons.

Pennywise balloon!

WE ALL FLOAT DOWN HERE!

Golden Girls merch!

You say you can’t get enough Golden Girls merchandise? Perhaps you spoke too soon..

giant Porg!

Giant stuffed Porg foreshadowing our next major outing.

Anne with lightsaber!

Anne with lightsaber. More foreshadowing. Check back in two weeks for the big payoff!

The End. Thanks for viewing!

Other chapters in this special MCC miniseries:

Part 1: Paul Rudd! From “Clueless” and Marvel and Stuff!
Part 2: David Tennant!
Part 3: Marvel and DC Cosplay
Part 4: Disney and Star Wars Cosplay
Part 5: Last Call for Cosplay
Part 6: Artists Alley Plus
Part 7: Who Else We Met, What Else We Did


Our Star Wars Celebration Chicago 2019 Pre-Show: Who We’ve Already Met

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Billy Dee Williams!

The debonair Mr. Billy Dee Williams at Cincinnati Comic Expo 2016, raising the bar for convention fashion.

This weekend my wife Anne and I will be attending the latest edition of Star Wars Celebration, Lucasfilm’s recurring major convention celebrating their works, creations, actors, fans, and merchandise, not always in that order. After jaunts around the U.S. coast and overseas, this year’s will be in Chicago, gracing the Midwest with its products for the first time since 2005. Previously on MCC, we shared our personal experiences with Celebrations 2002 and 2005, which were each held at our very own Indiana Convention Center. We’re happy they’ve turned our direction once more, but a bit flummoxed by a few aspects of the show, which we hope goes well despite our nervousness about a few early warning signs.

Bugging us more than anything else is the lack of big, big-name participants from either The Force Awakens or The Last Jedi. We had accepted that there would be a Wampa’s chance on Mustafar of The Mark Hamill coming within a thousand miles of Chicago that weekend after his not-so-great 2017 experience in Orlando. (Ditto Harrison Ford, which we absolutely understand.) But being snubbed by the main casts of the last two non-digressive SW films stings a tad. We also despaired when special guest Temuera Morrison (Aquaman, Attack of the Clones) canceled last week. He was at the top of our must-meet list and has now freed up some of our funds for other activities, such as slightly better Chicago food.

We hope to have fun nonetheless, but of those folks scheduled to attend, we’ve already met many of them. While we’re counting down to opening day this coming Thursday, please enjoy this look back at this year’s Celebration guests that we’ve already met at previous conventions. Please feel free to pretend this is an exclusive sneak preview of the weekend to come. For other folks besides us, I mean.

(Special note for first-time visitors: the following photo gallery includes a few pics taken before we went fully digital in 2009. Our 35mm film quality varied wildly. On the other hand, three of these have been remastered for better presentation than their original appearance MCC. Another pic has never before been shared on MCC and had to be unearthed from our physical archives, which is a phrase here meaning “shoeboxes”. Thus is balance brought to the Force.)

Anthony Daniels!

For Star Wars Celebration 2002, legendary droid Anthony Daniels hosted a night-before event at Indy’s Castleton Square Mall sponsored by Suncoast Video. Remember them?

Peter Mayhew!

Somehow at SW 2002 we caught Peter Mayhew, the O.G. Chewbacca, at a rare moment without a line.

Warwick Davis!

Also at SWC 2002: Warwick Davis, best Ewok ever. I should really get around to watching Willow someday.

Julian Glover!

And then SWC 2002 brought in Imperial officer Julian Glover (Game of Thrones, Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade).

Sith Lord Photo Op!

Indiana Comic Con 2016 reunited Ray Park and Ian McDiarmid, Sith Lord master and apprentice teaming up again for old time’s sake.

Jason Isaacs!

One of the biggest names at Cincinnati Comic Expo 2017 was Jason Isaacs. Sure, there was Lucius Malfoy and Star Trek: Discovery, but he also played a recurring villain on Star Wars Rebels, so he’s invited to SWC Chicago.

Daniel Logan!

C2E2 2013 recruited a trio of Star Wars all-stars. Once upon a time, Daniel Logan was kid Boba Fett from Attack of the Clones. More recently he played a “Captain Fett” in the fourth Sharknado. Yes, really.

Ashley Eckstein!

Again from C2E2 2013: Ashley Eckstein not only voiced the animated young padawan Ahsoka Tano from The Clone Wars onward; she also launched Her Universe, a line of fine geek-girl apparel.

Orli Shoshan!

Concluding the “Star Wars Goes to C2E2 2013” trilogy is Orli Shoshan, a.k.a. Jedi Master Shaak Ti from Episodes II and III. Today she lives in Chicago and has a variety of professions going.

John Ratzenberger!

TV’s John Ratzenberger was welcomed to C2E2 2016 on the strength of Cheers and Every Pixar Film Ever, but Star Wars fans know of his blink-and-miss-it role in The Empire Strikes Back. So yeah, Cliff Clavin is coming to Celebration!

Alan Tudyk and Gina Torres!

I first met Alan Tudyk at Wizard World Chicago 2013, but I got a much better pic of him at C2E2 2018 with his Firefly wife Gina Torres, who also has a few Star Wars voice credits but will not be at Celebration Chicago. Tudyk voiced the snarky droid K-2SO in Rogue One, not to mention various oddballs in Disney’s last six animated films.

Timothy Zahn!

We’ve also met a few writers from the Star Wars universe. In February 2004 Anne managed a 24-mile solo drive to an unfamiliar side of town to meet novelist Timothy Zahn, creator of Grand Admiral Thrawn, at a Barnes & Noble signing.

Timothy Zahn!

13 years later at C2E2 2017, Anne finally got her wish for a vastly improved retake with Zahn.

John Jackson Miller!

Before Dark Horse Comics relinquished the Star Wars comics license to Marvel, John Jackson Miller made his mark on such series as Knights of the Old Republic. And as seen here at Indiana Comic Con 2016, yes, he’s dabbled in other universes.

Greg Pak!

Live from Artists Alley at C2E2 2014: comics writer Greg Pak’s greatest contribution to society so far was arguably Planet Hulk, the celebrated arc that had several elements adapted into Thor: Ragnarok. He’ll be at Celebration Chicago on Saturday discussing his plans to take over Marvel’s Star Wars ongoing series this summer, among other relevant projects.

Charles Soule!

We’ve met writer/lawyer Charles Soule three times at C2E2, seen here from 2018 with his roller coaster of a debut novel, The Oracle Year. He just announced Tuesday night he’ll be popping in Sunday and Monday for limited signings and at least one panel.

Social Issues Panel 2015!

We’ve even met one of this year’s panel hosts. These are all awesome folks at Indiana Comic Con 2015, but at far left is the relevant Amy Ratcliffe, Managing Editor at Nerdist Industries. With her impressive credits at a multitude of geek sites, she’ll be meeting and introducing other awesome folks at Celebration Chicago.

Final tally: that’s thirteen actors, four writers, and one geek host. Tens of thousands of Star Wars fans will be lining up this weekend at Celebration Chicago to meet them and more! Meanwhile, Anne and I will be seeking out the “more”. Updates as they occur!

Star Wars Celebration Chicago 2019!

Watch this space for Star Wars Celebration Chicago 2019 updates! Or check my Twitter feed for live whining if/when everything goes wrong and I start making rueful Fandom Fest jokes! That’s when you’ll know to send in a rescue party.

MCC Live-Tweet: Our First Star Wars Celebration Chicago 2019 Line

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Star Wars Celebration Chicago 2019!

Yep, this thing again.

Previously on Midlife Crisis Crossover: this weekend Anne and I are attending this year’s Star Wars Celebration in scenic, freezing Chicago. Once again we returned to McCormick Place, a mere three weeks after C2E2, so the layout and the stress levels of Chicago traffic were still fresh in our minds.

We arrived at McCormick Place at 9:15. The exhibit hall was scheduled to open at 1:00 p.m. We had no pressing appointments right at opening. Our main concern was getting a parking space somewhere within a thousand yards of the show. We’re used to the attendance volume of our normal Midwest cons, but Star Wars Celebrations are world-famous affairs that attract international audiences as well as those of us within relatively convenient driving distance. 5-day passes sold out months ago, so we knew we’d have greater odds against us.

Also not in our favor: Star Wars fans love arriving early for the sake of the brand. It’s a legendary part of the culture, ever since obsessive trendsetters decided there was an internal logic to camping out for the chance to see The Phantom Menace ahead of the rest of the world. Whether or not Jar-Jar was worth the sacrifice is a question only they can answer, but fellow fans have been following their example ever since.

So we drove from Indianapolis to Chicago, a 195-minute drive this time thanks to road construction, obtained parking pretty close to where I’d hoped, then stood in a line that promised to run 225 minutes if we were lucky. We still bear the emotional scars of Star Wars Celebration 2002, for which Anne’s Hyperspace fan club membership promised us early show-floor access and instead we entered over an hour after opening because that’s how shoddy an affair it was. We didn’t want to repeat that.

That meant we had time to kill. And kill it I did, mostly on Twitter and a little on Instagram. Facebook refused to cooperate and pretended there was no Wi-Fi, which is a lie and the Facebook app is a bandwidth-hoarding lying liar. So I amused myself where I could.

Slight exposition preamble: fans couldn’t just attend Celebration and do anything they wanted to do. For some of the exclusive Star Wars Celebration Store toys and products, and for the most popular panels (including Friday morning’s coveted panel on Star Wars Episode IX with special guests JJ Abrams, Kathleen Kennedy, and other as-yet-unrevealed figures), attendees had to enter their names into lotteries to win permission to buy or do those things. If you lose, then that cool thing doesn’t get to be part of your SWCC experience.

Anne and I lost all the lotteries we entered. We won nothing. We wondered if folks who blew $850 on upper-class VIP admission were given highest priorities over us peasants, but we’ve seen evidence of VIP losers out there as well. Anyway, my point is my bitterness shows a tad in some of the following glimpses into our day. Enjoy anyway!

…and then we were off and running because they let us in at 12:45, so we only waited 210 minutes on the same hard tile in the same crowded hall before we were unleashed upon the premises and still not allowed to buy or do the most coveted things.

More updates coming soon!

Star Wars Celebration Chicago 2019 Photos #1: Imperial Cosplay

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Clonetrooper!

“Welcome to Star Wars Celebration Chicago! Yes, we DO need to see your identification.”

Previously on Midlife Crisis Crossover: April 11-15, 2019, was the ninth American edition of Lucasfilm’s Star Wars Celebration, recurring major convention celebrating their works, creations, actors, fans, and merchandise, not always in that order. After jaunts around the U.S. coast and overseas, this year’s was in Chicago, gracing the Midwest with its products for the first time since 2005. My wife Anne and I attended Thursday through Saturday and fled Sunday morning. We only stayed for three days partly to save money and partly because we’ve learned from past experience that three days is our limit at any given convention before we slam into a mental wall and need respite from geek immersion before we get sick of it all.

Based on past posting experience, the most popular part of every convention experience is cosplay, so those photos get to go first. We’re fans of costumes and try to keep an eye out for heroes, villains, antiheroes, supporting casts, and various oddities that look impressive and/or we haven’t seen at other cons. That was a bit challenging with a con about Star Wars for Star Wars by Star Wars starring Star Wars. It’s not as though the other cons we attend lack for Star Wars costumes. But we had fun capturing whoever we could.

First up: Stormtroopers! And other soldiers for the Empire, including a few folks from the Imperial successors that are the First Order, several of whom are surely card-carrying members of the 501st Legion. Caveats for first-time visitors to Midlife Crisis Crossover:

1. My wife and I are not professional photographers, nor do we believe ourselves worthy of press passes. These were taken as best as possible with the intent to share with fellow fans out of a sincere appreciation for the works inspired by the heroes, hobbies, artistic expressions, and/or intellectual properties that brought us geeks together under one vaulted roof for the weekend. We did what we could with the tools and circumstances at hand. We don’t use selfie sticks, tripods, or cameras that cost more than a month’s worth of groceries.

2. It’s impossible for any human or organization to capture every costume on hand. What’s presented in this series will be a fraction of a fraction of a fraction of a fraction of the sum total costume experience. Other corners of the internet will represent those other fractions that we missed, which is the cool part of having so many people doing this sort of thing.

3. We didn’t attend Sunday or Monday. As previously explained at excessive length in a previous entry, we also nearly never watch costume contests anymore. Sincere apologies to anyone we missed as a result.

4. Corrections and comments are always welcome, especially when we get to Part 3, which will include at least three characters we young geezers didn’t recognize. We kept up on Star Wars for decades and still remember many of the old-school characters, but we have knowledge gaps vis a vis recent video games, animated series, and lesser extras from the recent films. But I do like learning new names and worlds even if you’re more immersed in them than I am.

5. Enjoy!


Gatling Trooper!

Gatling-Trooper and sequel-trilogy mini-Trooper.

Director Krennic!

Director Krennic and his team prepare to canvass the area for that pesky Jyn Erso.

Elite Praetorian Guard!

Elite Praetorian Guard from The Last Jedi.

Rogue One tank!

Troopers parade with Kylo Ren atop a TX-225 GAVw tank from Rogue One…as well as a too-happy Rebel.

Kanchar!

Kanchar, an Imperial officer from Marvel’s current Star Wars canon.

Imperial with cannon!

Snowtroopers accompany an Imperial officer who misses getting his hand dirty.

Goldtrooper!

Possibly the most fabulous Trooper armor ever.

Vacatrooper!

Sometimes even Stormtroopers need a vacation but can’t tear themselves away from their work.

PALPATINE/VADER 2020!

Stormtrooper getting political on the campaign trail.

Zombietrooper!

Zombietrooper with realistic slow-shuffling action.

Ricktrooper!

Ricktrooper! Insert obligatory if strained “Pickle Rick” joke.

Gonzo Vader and Muppet-troopers!

The Great Gonzo a.k.a. Dearth Nadir and his Muppet-troopers.

Statler and Waldorf!

Imperial officers Statler and Waldorf give the Rebel Alliance two thumbs down.

Raptroopers!

“WE’RE STORMTROOPERS AND WE’RE HERE TO SAY / LEADER SNOKE SENT US HERE TO HUNT DOWN REY! / WE KNOW OUR COSTUMES WILL MAKE THE CUT / ‘CAUSE OUR RHYMES ARE HEAVY LIKE JABBA THE HUTT!”

To be continued! Other chapters in this very special maxiseries:

Prologue: Our Star Wars Celebration Chicago 2019 Pre-Show: Who We’ve Already Met
Part Zero: MCC Live-Tweet: Our First Star Wars Celebration Chicago 2019 Line
Part 2: The Right Side of the Force Cosplay
Part 3: Scum and Villainy Cosplay
Part 4 of ???: [coming soon]

Star Wars Celebration Chicago 2019 Photos #2: The Right Side of the Force Cosplay

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X-Wing Pilots!

Anyone can wear the X-Wing flight suit. You could wear the X-Wing flight suit.

Previously on Midlife Crisis Crossover:

April 11-15, 2019, was the ninth American edition of Lucasfilm’s Star Wars Celebration, recurring major convention celebrating their works, creations, actors, fans, and merchandise, not always in that order. After jaunts around the U.S. coast and overseas, this year’s was in Chicago, gracing the Midwest with its products for the first time since 2005. My wife Anne and I attended Thursday through Saturday and fled Sunday morning. Based on past posting experience, the most popular part of every convention experience is cosplay, so those photos get to go first…

Next up: the good guys! Yahoooooo!


Jhoram Bey?

Weequay X-Wing pilot, possibly Jhoram Bey from Dark Horse Comics’ Star Wars: Legacy.

Admiral Ackbar!

Admiral Ackbar, confident that he’s not walking into a, I dunno, whatever kind of a bad thing people walk into sometimes.

Mon Mothma!

Mon Mothma, reminding us to never, ever forget those Bothans.

Nien Nunb!

Nien Nunb, history’s most underrated Millennium Falcon copilot.

Lando Calrissian!

Star of the upcoming holiday classic Star Wars: The Rise of Lando and His Skywalkers.

Endor bunker!

An alt-universe Endor bunker infiltration scene in which Han, Leia and Chewie brought along two Jedi plus Boba Fett, who owed them for rescuing him from the Sarlacc.

Luke Rey Ren!

Which one of these three is not a true Skywalker? The answer might surprise you!

Rey desert gear!

Rey in full desert gear, a rare convention variant.

Shaak Ti!

Jedi Master Shaak Ti, whose death after Order 66 was deleted from Revenge of the Sith, and in my mind therefore never actually happened. Anyone who thinks that casually citing her offscreen death in an official reference book counts as an actual, in-story death is a terrible world-builder. One of the things I loathe most about the Star Wars Universe is how many offscreen events, names, and characterizations went unused but are treated as though they “count” anyway. That’s straight-up “Dumbledore is gay”-level storytelling hogwash.

Jedi parade!

Jedi parade, which happened around the same time as the Celebration Costume Contest.

Queen Padme Amidala and Princess Leia!

Queen Padme Amidala hanging out with her princess daughter.

two Padmes!

One-two Padmes rule before you. That’s what I said now.

5 Padmes and a Jedi!

Another teaser from the upcoming Into the Padmeverse.

Finn + Canto Bight Police Officers!

Finn under arrest by Canto Bight Police Officers for the rare crime of Letting a Chase Scene Drag On Too Long.

Chirrut Îmwe!

Chirrut Îmwe from Rogue One. He is one with the Force; the Force is with him. He is one with the Force; the Force is with him. He is one with the Force; the Force is with him. He is one with the Force; the Force is with him. He is one with the Force; the Force is with him.

K-2SO!

K-2SO, friend to children everywhere.

Wicket?

Also a friend to children everywhere: Wicket the Ewok! Who may have been murdered by this Ewok who stole his mini-cloak.

Logray!

Logray the Medicine Ewok, whose stripes sometimes resemble the suspect in the Wicket case, had no comment for us on the record.

Jaxxon!

Jaxxon the green smuggler rabbit, one of the most beloved creations from ye olde Marvel apocrypha, recently canonized in IDW Publishing’s all-ages Star Wars comics. Everything old and weird is new again but still weird!

Scooby-Doobacca!

Sometimes celebs will attend conventions secretly in costume, such as Scooby-Doo here cosplaying as Chewbacca. Call him Scooby-Doobacca.

Wookiee-the-Pooh!

Wookiee-the-Pooh! Wookiee-the-Pooh! Snuggly giant smuggler all fluffed and tough! That’s Wookiee-the-Pooh! Wookiee-the-Pooh! Willy-nilly-kill-y old friend!

To be continued! Other chapters in this very special maxiseries:

Prologue: Our Star Wars Celebration Chicago 2019 Pre-Show: Who We’ve Already Met
Part Zero: MCC Live-Tweet: Our First Star Wars Celebration Chicago 2019 Line
Part 1: Imperial Cosplay
Part 3: Scum and Villainy Cosplay
Part 4 of ???: [coming soon]

Star Wars Celebration Chicago 2019 Photos #3: Scum and Villainy Cosplay

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Darth Mauls!

Darth Mauls. Presumably they’ve killed their master so their total Sith count is back down to two again.

Previously on Midlife Crisis Crossover:

April 11-15, 2019, was the ninth American edition of Lucasfilm’s Star Wars Celebration, recurring major convention celebrating their works, creations, actors, fans, and merchandise, not always in that order. After jaunts around the U.S. coast and overseas, this year’s was in Chicago, gracing the Midwest with its products for the first time since 2005. My wife Anne and I attended Thursday through Saturday and fled Sunday morning. Based on past posting experience, the most popular part of every convention experience is cosplay, so those photos get to go first…

In our last call for cosplay photos, we bring on the bad guys and the gray-area dwellers — the Sith, the bounty hunters, the Mandalorians, and more, more more. Boo hiss!


Padme Vader Aphra!

Darth Vader himself (plus his daughter!Padme) alongside his former hired hand Doctor Aphra.

Anne Vader Boushh!

Anne wanted a photo with at least one certified classic Vader. Special guest Boushh was a bonus.

booth Boushh!

We also spotted Boushh working for one of the vendors. A booth Boushh, as it were.

Darth Revan v Chewbacca!

Darth Revan from Knights of the Old Republic proves his mettle by taking on Chewbacca.

Darth Malgus!

Revan’s rival Darth Malgus proves his mettle by taking on, uh, this one woman. You don’t know here but he swears she’s, like, totally formidable.

Count Dooku!

Count Dooku need not test himself to impress anyone.

Asajj Ventress!

Asajj Ventress will test anyone who merely looks at her funny.

Jawa!

Jawas, known for using intense torture methods on droids, are basically cute tiny bullies.

Gamorrean guard!

Gamorrean guard only pawn in game of life.

Intermission:

At most cons we end up with a small selection of photos I like to call “Stump the Olds”, in which we share photos of costumes that we thought looked somewhere between fancy and ingenious, and we took their picture even though we have absolutely no idea what character we’re looking at. If someone recognizes any of our next four subjects and can broaden our horizons by identifying them, that would be tremendously appreciated. I’m not quite satisfied with posting blind, unlabeled, anonymous cosplay pics even though thousands of convention-cosplay photogs super-love doing exactly that on Instagram all the time. I aspire to be at least a smidgen better than that if someone’ll help cure my ignorance. Much obliged!

Star Wars guard!

Star Wars assassin guard gunman guy.

mini-Kylo!

Mini-Kylo flanked by his Elektra Elves.

General Grievous!

Grievous and a Cerean Sith Lord, possibly Ki-Adi-Mundi’s evil twin.

Twi'leks and Sith Lady!

Two regal Twi’leks and a Sith Lady.

gray Mandalorian!

A Mandalorian, if not necessarily THE Mandalorian.

Ackbar in prison!

Poor Admiral Ackbar in Mandalorian jail after walking right into a (stop me if you’ve heard this one)

Lego Boba Fett!

Lego Boba Fett from Lego Mandalore.

Medieval Jango and Boba Fett!

Medieval Jango and Boba Fett from medieval Mandalore.

corrugated Bossk!

A rather corrugated Bossk from the Trandoshan box factory.

Embo!

Another more recent bounty hunter, Embo from Clone Wars.

Dark Helmet!

Dark Helmet! Ask your parents about this one if they haven’t already made you watch Spaceballs.

Ice Cream Maker Guy!

Ice Cream Maker Guy and his Ice Cream Maker, teamed up with Ice Cream Maker and his Ice Cream Maker Guy. ICEPTION.

(Some would argue we’ll never know the true alignment of Willrow Hood, a.k.a. Ice Cream Maker Guy. I would posit his nearly forty-year evasion of all detection in itself makes him a suspicious person of interest. Call him Darth Breyer.)

To be continued! Other chapters in this very special maxiseries:

Prologue: Our Star Wars Celebration Chicago 2019 Pre-Show: Who We’ve Already Met
Part Zero: MCC Live-Tweet: Our First Star Wars Celebration Chicago 2019 Line
Part 1: Imperial Cosplay
Part 2: The Right Side of the Force Cosplay
Part 4 of ???: [coming soon]

Star Wars Celebration Chicago 2019 Photos #4: Rising with Skywalkers

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Colbert Abrams Kennedy!

Our host Stephen Colbert., director J.J. Abrams, and producer Kathleen Kennedy, streaming to us live from a galaxy far, far away.

Previously on Midlife Crisis Crossover:

April 11-15, 2019, was the ninth American edition of Lucasfilm’s Star Wars Celebration, recurring major convention celebrating their works, creations, actors, fans, and merchandise, not always in that order. After jaunts around the U.S. coast and overseas, this year’s was in Chicago, gracing the Midwest with its products for the first time since 2005. My wife Anne and I attended Thursday through Saturday and fled Sunday morning…

The centerpiece of the entire weekend, its biggest event, its most anticipated breaking news story, was the long-awaited first trailer for Star Wars Episode IX, as yet un-subtitled when the convention began. The trailer’s release was scheduled as part of an hour-long presentation which would star director J.J. Abrams and producer Kathleen Kennedy, at the very least. Additional unnamed guests were promised. It was fair to assume these surprise pop-ins would be the big, big-name costars from The Force Awakens and The Last Jedi, almost none of whom were on the show’s main guest list.

Everyone wanted in on that event. Everyone wanted to be part of that live magic. Everyone wanted to count their first viewing of the trailer among their greatest SWCC 2019 memories. Not everyone got their wish.


D/O!

Someone earned a six-figure salary to mount a toy Apollo 11 capsule on a roll of duct tape.

The trailer presentation was scheduled Friday at 11 a.m. CDT, to be held across the street from McCormick Place at Wintrust Arena, home of the WNBA’s Chicago Sky. The venue seats 10,387 people. Given that Celebration’s attendance would number in the tens of thousands, there was no way for the entire geek population to flood in there at the same time. The showrunners could’ve taken the same approach that we experienced at Celebrations II or III (2002 and 2005) and held the same live event multiple times, but they decided against it. Instead…there was the controversial lottery.

Abrams Kennedy concerned!

Abrams and Kennedy concentrating on questions they wouldn’t possibly answer.

Each ticket allowed its holder one (1) entry in a prize drawing to win a chance to sit in Wintrust Arena and view Abrams, Kennedy, and their mystery guests in person, much like rock concerts that would cost about the same as the con did, or a megachurch service that would pray for tithes of similar value. Some winners instead received the consolation prize of a seat in either of the two McCormick Place stages that would serve as overflow venues, streaming the same event simultaneously on large screens but a few blocks away from where the action was really happening. Between the Galaxy Stage and the Twin Suns stage, that added a few more thousand seats to sweeten the pot and broaden the base of winners. That’s perhaps 14,000+ lottery winners in all.

This same system was used for other highly sought-after Celebration features — seats for the Saturday infomercial for Star Wars Galaxy’s Edge (gloriously detailed mini-parks coming soon to both Disneyland and Disney World), seats for the Sunday panel for The Mandalorian (their upcoming live-action streaming series, hosted by showrunner Jon Favreau in person), and permissions to buy the hottest Celebration-exclusive merchandise from Funko Pop, Hasbro, and Lego. Tens of thousands could enter. Far less than that would win.

Anne and I were total lottery losers. We didn’t bother entering the lotteries for events held on days we wouldn’t be there, but we entered all the rest, even those that didn’t matter to us. We won nothing. No chrome-blue Funko Pops. No Hasbro action figures based on figures Anne already bought twenty years ago. No Lego sets, whatever they were. No arena seats. Not even overflow seats. Nada. Zip. Zilch. Bupkis. Diddly-squat.

BB-8!

Ladies and gentlemen, it’s BB-8! Also, big shout-out to the designers of the Galaxy’s Edge booth for their 15-foot alien stalagmite, a super annoying obstacle for hundreds of us, far worse than the world’s largest floppy hat.

The system had its flaws. Anyone who bought more than one ticket (say, three to five passes for three to five separate days) had one chance to win for each ticket. Some folks entered even when they had tickets to attend other days but not the actual day-of. More than a few folks auctioned off their seats to other fans on eBay for exorbitant prices. During the event itself, we learned from friends on the inside that at least a few hundred Wintrust Arena seats, possibly more, remained empty for the entire hour-plus, for reasons never explained. The system was far from transparent and far from generous in the eyes of thousands of us. It could’ve been an even bitterer pill to swallow: at least we weren’t among the VIP ticketholders who paid an upper-class sum of $850.00 for their amazing colossal five-day Celebration weekend but lost the Episode IX lottery.

(We also take comfort that we weren’t the dude in the arena wearing a “FIRE RIAN JOHNSON” T-shirt, or the handful of trolls trying and failing to heckle Celebration via its Twitter hashtag, who in all likelihood weren’t even at Celebration. I just don’t get some human groupings. At all.)

I’ve heard from fans who fly more often than we do that lotteries aren’t uncommon in your bigger, more famous cons in New York or California, especially San Diego. That’s not how our Midwest cons roll. At all.

Droid preshow!

BB-8 welcomes his new buddy, way too itty-bitty for us to see.

Total lottery losers who were shut out of the Arena as well as both overflow rooms had three viewing options:

  1. Watch the presentation and trailer later at their own convenience while the rest of the world passed them by
  2. Watch the presentation and trailer live but alone from the comfort of their own hotel room or home via YouTube on a device of their choosing
  3. Watch the presentation and trailer live on kindasorta big screens at the Star Wars Live Stage in the middle of the exhibit hall with thousands of fellow losers, obstructions, and complete lack of acoustically useful accommodations, by which I mean lots of loud noise and poor speakers

After spending Tuesday and Wednesday upset and frustrated, we ultimately settled on option 1 as our Plan A. We decided not to care for a while, and see how long that would last us.

Friday we arrived at McCormick Place via hotel shuttle, walked inside at 9:55 a.m., avoided the show floor screens, and lined up across the hall at the Celebration Store, perpetually busy home of the show’s official merchandise and non-toyetic exclusives. Thursday had been an utter wreck for them — register outages became a major issue that resulted in many, many fans spending upwards of 7-8 hours in line for the Store. Such reports were not encouraging. We absolutely did not want an encore of our disastrous experience with the Celebration 2005 Store. We figured our best possible chance to get into the Store was during the Episode IX panel, when the majority of the population would care more about the trailer than about shopping, if only for that brief moment in time.

That part of our plan worked. It took us a tidy 75 minutes to get into the Store. I spent the last ten of those minutes using my phone to catch the livestream, in enough time to see surprise host Stephen Colbert take the stage and rattle off a monologue that I mostly missed because I never, ever take my phone off Mute. I turned on YouTube’s beta-testing closed-caption function, with mixed results. Our turn to actually enter the Store and gaze upon their wares came up a few minutes later, before Colbert had brought out any guests.

It took us five minutes to confirm they were already out of the two souvenirs we wanted more than anything in town, and fifteen minutes for us to pick replacement souvenirs and pay for them. We exited at 11:35. That part was much faster than expected, and didn’t leave us with much else to do.

Trailer Audience!

Without any zoom-lens use, you can still make out a few faraway iotas of Kylo Ren’s petulance.

Purely for kicks, we switched to option 3, joined the throngs in the exhibit hall, and anticipated a dissatisfying viewing experience. We arrived too late to catch one of the more notable moments, a standing ovation in the arena for Kelly Marie Tran, who we understand received the loudest, happiest response of anyone on that stage.

Aisles were clogged with thousands of fellow lottery losers, standing wherever they could find space that afforded them screen visibility around various tall booth walls, stacked boxes, oversize banners, and other unfriendly protrusions. The noise level at first was about what I’d expect drunken bars are like on game nights. I couldn’t understand a single word emanating from the speakers. Naturally the big screens offered no closed-captioning.

Suotamo live!

I tried the YouTube livestream instead. Wi-Fi results were very mixed in this throng.. Thrill to the sight of Joonas Suotamo buffering and buffering. And on an additional broadcast time-delay, at that.

Virtually all commerce had stopped in favor of standing still and watching the proceedings from far, far away. Authors at their autograph tables stopped signing and turned to watch for themselves. Vendors were not happy. Those vendors could go outside and fly kites for a while for all we cared.

balcony watchers!

Fans perched at the upper-level café for a hopefully clear view from midair.

Shortly after noon, at long last began our feature presentation. Several rounds of “SSHHHHHHHHHH!” filled the hall, then went silent in unison at the sound of Rey’s heavy breathing. The music began at pianissimo and quickly worked its way up the decibel levels and got us worked up.

Trailer time!

The camera craned away from the guests on stage and made way for the reason we were all gathered here today: advertising!

The crowd watched as one. We cheered as one. We whooped and hollered as one. Together we held our breath in the seconds before the subtitle was revealed to the entire world at that very moment after years of speculation. Together we got it. Tens of thousands of voices cried out in Chicago with the interjections and expletives of their choosing. To say nothing of the reactions of the Viewers at Home.

Rise of Skywalker!

Cue thunderous applause.

Back in the arena, Celebration guest Ian McDiarmid took the stage, his renewed relevance revealed with the utterance of a single, sinister laugh. He spoke three words. They rolled the trailer again. Anyone who hadn’t already run anyway in ecstasy stood enraptured a few minutes longer.

Both times I didn’t understand a single word of Mark Hamill’s narration. I had to wait till two days later to catch it at home at the preferred viewing size and audio level. But we got the gist of it, which was: whoa.

I assume you’ve already seen this several times. If not, go click-happy.

Anything we did at Celebration beyond this point was basically extra credit. The Live Stage provided its own opportunities for extra credit over the next few days. Chief among its offerings: frame-by-frame forensic dissection of that trailer we all just watched. Star Wars fans being who they are, now that we’d felt its emotions and let its triumphal score pierce us to the soul, the next obvious step was to look for more clues. Hardcore fans needed to know everything and they needed to guess at it right now.

Kylo Red!

It’s Kylo Ren in red! Who’s he fighting? Are they anyone? Who gets to kill him? Someone’ll kill him, right?

Finn Study!

And there’s Finn! Will he ever get a last name? Or twelve action figure variants? Or an Attack the Block sequel?

The arena would’ve been a comfier, more immediate experience with better sound and larger visuals. But we, the Legion of Lottery Losers, made peace with our own lower-tier mass communion. Whether the setting is a state-of-the-art theater or an extra-large flea market, there’s something about a geek harmonic convergence that convention showrunner fiat and any number of internet trolls can’t blast away.

Lando Returns!

…yeah, there were tears in that exhibit hall.

To be continued! Other chapters in this very special maxiseries:

Prologue: Our Star Wars Celebration Chicago 2019 Pre-Show: Who We’ve Already Met
Part Zero: MCC Live-Tweet: Our First Star Wars Celebration Chicago 2019 Line
Part 1: Imperial Cosplay
Part 2: The Right Side of the Force Cosplay
Part 3: Scum and Villainy Cosplay
Part 5 of ???: [coming soon]

Star Wars Celebration Chicago 2019 Photos #5: The Stars in Our Galaxy

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Katee Sackhoff!

She played a recurring Mandalorian on Clone Wars and Rebels, but you might also know Katee Sackhoff from such series as Battlestar Galactica, The Flash, and that not-bad Bionic Woman update that lasted about three minutes.

Previously on Midlife Crisis Crossover:

April 11-15, 2019, was the ninth American edition of Lucasfilm’s Star Wars Celebration, recurring major convention celebrating their works, creations, actors, fans, and merchandise, not always in that order. After jaunts around the U.S. coast and overseas, this year’s was in Chicago, gracing the Midwest with its products for the first time since 2005. My wife Anne and I attended Thursday through Saturday and fled Sunday morning…

It’s not a Celebration without a bevy of actors who’ve appeared on various planets throughout the Star Wars universe. We had our choice among a mixture of old pros from the original trilogy, a few big names from the prequels and from Rogue One, exactly one (1) actor from Episodes VII and VIII, and a wide array of all-star voice actors from various animated projects and video games. Though we’d met quite a few already, we zeroed in on a few key names and once again added to our jazz-hands photo-op collection.

For our three-day experience the math worked out to one photo-op per day. My big moment with Katee Sackhoff, star of TV and our lead photo, was on Friday after lunch. For some reason hers was the most awkward in terms of the lineup experience. I got through the line to get into the celebrity area at twenty minutes before showtime, then was directed to a makeshift pre-photo-op line off to one side of the area, then to a dogpile on the opposite side of the area where they sorted us into photo-op groupings per the numbering on our tickets, then to the photo-op line itself. We nearly started on time and nobody looked at my ticket closely, including myself, because I unwittingly walked right in alongside Group 1 with my Group 3 ticket. So the group numbers were more of a guideline than a rule.

Thursday afternoon presented a different kind of awkwardness. Fans weren’t allowed into the celebrity area until ten minutes before their scheduled time. We tried lining up at twenty minutes till. We got through the line in a few minutes but were turned away. We honestly thought the line would take longer than that. Rebuffed but understanding, we walked away and got at the back of the line again. We reached the front again circa fifteen minutes till. We were rebuffed again. We joined the line one last time and finally reached the front no earlier than ten minutes prior. The system worked, technically.

And that’s when we met Sam Witwer. To Star Wars fans he’s the voice and model of the main character from the two Force Unleashed games, the voice of Darth Maul in Clone Wars and Solo: A Star Wars Story, and the voice of a few other ancillary characters, including Emperor Palpatine for any projects below Ian McDiarmid’s radar. To us he was one of the best villains to command a season of Smallville (Doomsday!), and he’s presently vexing Kara Danvers on The CW’s Supergirl as a radicalized version of DC’s Agent Liberty.

Sam Witwer!

Bonus points for his cool Dungeons & Dragons T-shirt.

Crowds were at their thickest on Saturday, but the first hour of the day was too early for things to have descended into chaos quite yet. Thus we had very little trouble lining up for the celeb area thirty minutes beforehand (note the continually sliding scale each day), then meeting Matt Lanter, known to the attending majority as the voice of Anakin Skywalker from Clone Wars. Anne and I had the pleasure of watching him costar in NBC’s sci-fi series Timeless for two seasons and a movie.

Matt Lanter!

Nowadays he keeps his Dark Side very much in check.

Not pictured is actor and stuntman John Morton, whom we met for autograph purposes Saturday afternoon. When listing his credits, the show seemed to give priority to that time he was Jeremy Bulloch’s Boba Fett body double in select scenes, but he also had face-time in The Empire Strikes Back as Dak Ralter, the gunner who shared a Snowspeeder with Luke Skywalker and died in that fateful Battle of Hoth. Ironically, half the conversation between Morton and Anne centered on lousy Midwest weather.

Longtime MCC fans know comic books are my thing, and that they often compose a significant part of our convention travelogues. Rather than a standard Artists Alley, Celebration has an Art Show where artists sell fully painted works for the price that fully painted works often run in a fine gallery. That typically means almost no comics artists included, but one such artist was on the docket: Cat Staggs, who’s drawn and painted numerous Wonder Woman works and covers for DC, as well as the creator-owned Image Comics miniseries Crosswind with writer Gail Simone, which I’ve mentioned here a couple of times. So I had to say hi.

Cat Staggs Booth!

her booth banner and glimpses of her two Celebration exclusive works inspired by World War II propaganda posters.

Cat Staggs!

Portrait of an artist selling many, many paintings to Star Wars fans.

Though access to the stars of Episodes VII through IX was extremely limited, a handful of them graced the Star Wars Live Stage in the middle of the exhibit hall for short interviews at seemingly random times. We missed all but one: a chat with John Boyega himself, a.k.a. Stormtrooper FN-2187,. a.k.a. Finn, a.k.a. Moses from Attack the Block. As with the Episode IX trailer, we couldn’t understand a single word emanating from the stage’s exasperatingly inadequate speakers, so we had to settle for basking in his mere presence and seeing who could take the least worst photos from him from a distance.

Faraway John Boyega!

We approached the center of the exhibit hall from the left and lo and behold, there was Boyega live, to our instant shock.

Boyega Chairs!

Boyega and his interviewer sat in orange sci-fi chairs below the screens. We soon realized to our chagrin we were facing the backs of their chairs.

Boyega answers!

I couldn’t tell you a single thing he said on that stage, but it couldn’t have been as funny as the moment during the Episode IX panel when Stephen Colbert asked what happened to Phasma and Boyega quickly confirmed, “SHE DEAD.”

Boyega pointing!

Boyega acknowledges the audience. Happy shrieking ensues.

Boyega cannon!

And yes, they let Boyega fire a T-shirt cannon into the crowd. Just once, though, because this was not the kind of show where freebies were a thing.

Boyega hands!

I look back on this moment pensively and wonder to myself, had Celebration been structured differently, what jazz-hands photo-ops might have been.

To be continued! Other chapters in this very special maxiseries:

Prologue: Our Star Wars Celebration Chicago 2019 Pre-Show: Who We’ve Already Met
Part Zero: MCC Live-Tweet: Our First Star Wars Celebration Chicago 2019 Line
Part 1: Imperial Cosplay
Part 2: The Right Side of the Force Cosplay
Part 3: Scum and Villainy Cosplay
Part 4: Rising with Skywalkers
Part 6 of ???: [coming soon]


Star Wars Celebration Chicago 2019 Photos #6: The Droids We Weren’t Looking For

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purple light-up astromech!

Purple light-up astromech guts.

Previously on Midlife Crisis Crossover:

April 11-15, 2019, was the ninth American edition of Lucasfilm’s Star Wars Celebration, recurring major convention celebrating their works, creations, actors, fans, and merchandise, not always in that order. After jaunts around the U.S. coast and overseas, this year’s was in Chicago, gracing the Midwest with its products for the first time since 2005. My wife Anne and I attended Thursday through Saturday and fled Sunday morning…

It was a Star Wars Celebration. Of course there was a veritable droid army on the premises. Far more than we’d expected, once we stumbled upon their barely advertised hiding place. Granted, there were a couple patrolling the exhibit hall…


Purple Astromech!

We’re used to remote-control life-size R2-D2s roaming around other entertainment and comic cons, but purple Artoo was a pretty variant.

BB-8 circle!

I thought this R.C. BB-8 was in the middle of a dance circle, but most of the people in this pic were actually the perpetually long line for the Funko Pop booth.

…but not until Saturday afternoon did we stumble across one of Celebration’s coolest secrets. On an odd, disjointed corner of the West Building’s first floor was a hallway traveled only by those seeking the Twin Suns Stage, the obligatory animation-marathon room, and the Anthony Daniels cash-only meet-and-greet room. Anne and I happened to walk that way for a quick meet-up with an old friend — more about that in a future chapter — when I noticed two odd things.

Droid Tracks!

ONE: droid tracks! Leading to…

C-3PO!

TWO: C-3PO standing in a darkened doorway. Not the Anthony Daniels room.

We wandered toward Threepio and discovered the Droid Builders Experience, a room packed with droids and other replica characters built, sewn, and/or kludged by talented Star Wars fans. I later found a mention of them in the Celebration program, but I’d seen no mentions of it on the app or their website. Inside was a wide, wild world of Lucasfilm homages and recreations, many bearing flourishes from alternate realities.

We were fascinated and I was upset that we only found it by sheer dumb luck. Or possibly destiny, whichever.

Droid basic 3!

Your standard droid lineup, plus banners from contributing fan clubs and chapters.

Gatling astromech!

Among the best astromech variants was this Gatling droid, made in Allentown, PA. I’m a sucker for Gatling guns in my pop culture.

Mustafarian panning droid!

Mustafarian panning droid from Revenge of the Sith. Molten lava sold separately.

sequined Mouse Droid!

Fabulous sequined Mouse Droid!

Jawas!

Special centerpiece dedicated to droid slavers.

Jawa!

Jawa mannequin peers into your very SOUL.

Porg nest!

Porg nest imples they breed and we can expect millions more in our future Star Wars movies and toy aisles.

Gonk custom droids!

A surprising number of Gonk droids, many with custom paint jobs.

GONK-E!

GONK-E seems a reasonable enough mash-up.

Tudyk Gonk droid!

Harder to explain: an Alan Tudyk-themed Gonk droid with voice chip reciting a few different Tudyk lines, including but not limited to “Curse your sudden but inevitable betrayal!

Ashcan Andy!

Some mad genius gave life to Ashcan Andy, an actual Garbage Pail Kid from back in the day.

B'omarr Monk!

Star Wars was a minority participant in my childhood toy collection, but B’omarr Monk was among my favorites. No idea whatever happened to mine.

Me and BB-8!

Me and BB-8, just hanging out in space, one of us more grounded than the other.

To be continued! Other chapters in this very special maxiseries:

Prologue: Our Star Wars Celebration Chicago 2019 Pre-Show: Who We’ve Already Met
Part Zero: MCC Live-Tweet: Our First Star Wars Celebration Chicago 2019 Line
Part 1: Imperial Cosplay
Part 2: The Right Side of the Force Cosplay
Part 3: Scum and Villainy Cosplay
Part 4: Rising with Skywalkers
Part 5: The Stars in Our Galaxy
Part 7 of ???: [coming soon]

Star Wars Celebration Chicago 2019 Photos #7: How to Draw Star Wars the Marvel Way

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TIE Fighter covers!

TIE Fighter #1 hit comic shops this past Wednesday. Above are variant covers by Tommy Lee Edwards for the next three issues.

Previously on Midlife Crisis Crossover:

April 11-15, 2019, was the ninth American edition of Lucasfilm’s Star Wars Celebration, recurring major convention celebrating their works, creations, actors, fans, and merchandise, not always in that order. After jaunts around the U.S. coast and overseas, this year’s was in Chicago, gracing the Midwest with its products for the first time since 2005. My wife Anne and I attended Thursday through Saturday and fled Sunday morning…

Thursday had very nearly zero panels scheduled. The panels scheduled Friday and Saturday largely broke down into the following groups:

  1. Panels that might’ve been cool if the annoying lottery system hadn’t made them attendance-prohibitive
  2. Panels for fans by fans about fan stuff
  3. Panels about novels we haven’t read
  4. Writing advice
  5. The official Marvel Comics panel

Larger panels filled up quickly. Numerous panels, especially those devoted to Star Wars novelists, were often capped because too many people were interested. But as a comics fan, one who’s spending a fair amount per month to keep up with much of Marvel’s Star Wars output (not all of it), I felt compelled to make a greater effort to get a foot in the door. Getting in line 45 minutes before showtime did the trick.


Matt Martin!

Because every convention panel should begin with a family photo slideshow.

Our panelists were Matt Martin from the Lucasfilm Story Group, overlords of the New Canon; Tom Groneman, assistant editor on Marvel’s Star Wars line; writer Greg Pak, whose “Age of Rebellion” specials kicked off in April; and writer Ethan Sacks, in charge of the upcoming Galaxy’s Edge miniseries advertising the big Disney Theme Parks additions (a bit more about those in a future entry). Later in the hour they also welcomed cover painter John Tyler Christopher. Our moderator was Dr. Christy Blanch, an Indiana professor, writer, comic shop owner, and superfan whom we’ve seen and met at previous cons (here, there, everywhere, and then some). The quintet had fun sharing Marvel’s next several months’ worth of Star Wars comics and the great-looking art that’ll be supporting them.

All of the following previews have surely been available on the comics news site of your choice for nearly a week now. I realized years ago I’ll never be a professional comics journalist, but it was fun to play at an amateurish version of it for an hour, tweeting photos and announcements as they occurred to anyone who cared to notice my existence.

It helped that, in this packed house that was capped thirty minutes in, we found ourselves seated behind three rows of ADA-dedicated seats that were almost entirely empty and thereby afforded us an unobstructed view of the screen, albeit at a bit of a remove.

Coming soon to a comic shop near you, then:

Galaxy's Edge comic!

The Galaxy’s Edge comic, serving to contextualize your next Disneyworld experience. Anne and I agree we should step foot in Disneyworld someday before we’re too old.

Tommy Lee Edwards!

More Galaxy’s Edge covers by Tommy Lee Edwards, a phenomenal artist we met at Star Wars Celebration 2005 shortly after he’d illustrated The Question for DC Comics.

Boba Fett comic!

Boba Fett comics. Please clap.

Finn cover!

JOHN BOYEGA: THE COMIC shall have all my moneys.

Finn by Ramon Rosanas!

Interior art from Finn by Ramon Rosanas. I love me some artists who cheerfully add blacks and textures to their pages instead of dumping all the work on the colorist.

Phasma by Leonard Kirk!

She may be dead, but in the hands of Leonard Kirk, Phasma shall live again. In the past, probably, but still.

Valance the Hunter!

Target Vader will bring back a forgotten character from Marvel’s original ’70s-’80s Star Wars apocrypha, a cyborg bounty hunter created by Archie Goodwin and Walt Simonson named Valance the Hunter.

I’d never heard of Valance before this panel, but a good friend helped bring me up to speed later. The day after we got home, I was decompressing after the long drive home and decided to sort through a stack of unwanted comics my sister-in-law had given to me a month ago. Amid a few 1978 issues of Battlestar Galactica and Fantastic Four, there was exactly one Star Wars comic — issue #16, the very first appearance of Valance the Hunter. It’s ludicrous coincidences like this that happily fuel my faith in an orderly universe.

Star Wars 16!

And now I know with about 89% certainty where Rob Liefeld borrowed the idea for Cable.

Holdo by Noto!

Noto’s work will also grace another upcoming special with three short stories, including one starring Laura Dern’s Vice Admiral Holdo.

Star Wars 70!

As previously noted here on MCC, Greg Pak will take over Marvel’s main Star Wars series with #68. Of the three Phil Noto covers we saw at the panel, #70 is my favorite.

If you look closely at that last photo, you can barely make out a line of cosplayers that Dr. Blanch invited to hang out on stage for a minute — anyone in the house dressed as Marvel characters. That added up to several Doctor Aphras, one Lieutenant Tolvan from Doctor Aphra, and one Marvel-old-school Jaxxon we later tracked down for a better look. No Valances yet, but I expect that head count to change at future cons.

To be continued! Other chapters in this very special maxiseries:

Prologue: Our Star Wars Celebration Chicago 2019 Pre-Show: Who We’ve Already Met
Part Zero: MCC Live-Tweet: Our First Star Wars Celebration Chicago 2019 Line
Part 1: Imperial Cosplay
Part 2: The Right Side of the Force Cosplay
Part 3: Scum and Villainy Cosplay
Part 4: Rising with Skywalkers
Part 5: The Stars in Our Galaxy
Part 6: The Droids We Weren’t Looking For
Part 8 of ???: [coming soon]

Star Wars Celebration Chicago 2019 Photos #8: Adventures in Official Merchandising

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Galaxy's Edge Falcon!

Lucasfilm’s answer to “Hi, we’re in…Delaware.”

Previously on Midlife Crisis Crossover:

April 11-15, 2019, was the ninth American edition of Lucasfilm’s Star Wars Celebration, recurring major convention celebrating their works, creations, actors, fans, and merchandise, not always in that order. After jaunts around the U.S. coast and overseas, this year’s was in Chicago, gracing the Midwest with its products for the first time since 2005. My wife Anne and I attended Thursday through Saturday and fled Sunday morning…

The exhibit hall was littered with dozens of vendors plying wares old and new, but if you treated the Celebration website and program as your concierges, their strongest recommendations to you were two particular stops most directly tied to Lucasfilm itself, each demanding either that weekend’s disposable income or a promise of your future vacationing dollars. Both had everyone’s attention. Both had long lines. Neither was guaranteed to satisfy everyone.

In the center of the show floor was the super-sized space devoted to Galaxy’s Edge, the new, immersive Star Wars sections coming soon to Disneyland and Disney World. Fans will (I’m guessing) be able to walk through familiar alien worlds, step aboard starship recreations, and/or drink at a cantina and see who can shoot whom first. Our chances of traveling to California within the next five years are slim to none, but Florida is slightly more probably, somewhere in the 500,000-to-1 range. Not really sure. But they tried their best to sell us on it.

Galaxy's Edge stalagmite!

Their booth was easy to find. You just had to keep your eye on the 15-foot alien stalagmite, which became our bitter enemy on Friday.

Ithorian head!

After a wait in a short line (as of Thursday, at least) brought us to a series of displays and cases, including the head of an Ithorian. That was “Hammerhead” in ye olde Kenner parlance.

Ithorian gravestone!

Next to the head was an Ithorian gravestone. I presume Galaxy’s Edge is really banking on high interest in the Lucasfilm Story Group expanding on the Hammerhead mythos.

Galaxy's Edge coaster!

Then we were invited to pretend we were riding a space roller coaster. Feel the implied thrills, feign gravity’s pull, fetch the Dramamine.

…and then we posed for the Millennium falcon backdrop in our lead photo. Beyond that, there was a corner selling Galaxy’s Edge merchandise (I think? I didn’t bother to peer closely) and another corner with kiosks inviting us to plan our next Disney vacation now, now, now. Which we did not.

Except for the Episode IX panel, the most in-demand feature of all Celebration was its official Celebration Store. Housing basic souvenirs as well as exclusive merchandise ostensibly available nowhere else unless you waited a few days to buy online, the Store attracted thousands of buyers throughout the long weekend and never, ever saw a moment in which a would-be shopper could simply walk right in on a whim. That’s never how Celebration Stores work, as we learned to our painful dismay at Celebration 2005.

This was the end of the line on Thursday afternoon. Not the entire line.

Celebration Store Line 2019!

Ha. Um. No. Hard pass.

Rampant system issues hampered checkout performance and resulted in some fans waiting seven to eight hours or more just for the chance to buy items with “Star Wars Celebration” either imprinted on them or intangibly implied by association. A few fans even missed their prepaid celebrity autograph and photo-op appointments because they felt the Celebration Store absolutely positively had to come first by any means necessary.

That’s not our level of fandom. We waited till Friday during the time frame when the rest of the population was distracted by the imminent arrival of the hotly anticipated Episode IX trailer. That’s when we hit the Store line.

Celebration Store curlicue!

It’s tough to discern the main line’s intricate curlicue shape from this pic, but there was indeed a method to its madness.

The line moved quickly Friday, vastly and appreciably unlike Thursday. Within a record-breaking 75 minutes we were permitted to step into Lucasfilm merchandising Nirvana. Theoretically.

Celebration store shopping!

Behold the magic of…Star Wars shopping with lots of elbow room.

Anne and I each had our hearts set on two specific shirts. 75 minutes after opening the doors, both shirts were sold out for the day, with additional quantities hidden in the back to be rationed out throughout the rest of the weekend. Nearly every vendor carrying Star Wars Celebration Exclusive Lucasfilm Merchandise™ took this approach to allocating their products in order to ensure a steady flow of income over the entire five-day event, as opposed to selling out of all the best items by Friday afternoon and being reduced to having nothing to sell on Sunday except their fixtures.

We understood their approach, but it sucked for us. We window-shopped lightly and sulked while grabbing a couple of consolation prizes.

Convors!

But they had plenty of Convors. Someone at Lucasfilm thinks Convors are the next Porgs. STOP TRYING TO MAKE CONVORS HAPPEN.

Death Star planters!

They also definitely weren’t out of Death Star planters. Nothing says “green thumb” like happy leaves sprouting from a genocidal planet-killer.

Loth-Wolf!

Someone else at Lucasfilm thinks Loth-Wolves are the next Convors. Hot tip: NOPE.

By 5 p.m. Friday afternoon we’d accomplished our other goals for the day and found ourselves with time to kill before an evening rendezvous. We found the Celebration Store line even shorter than it had been that morning and figured, why not gamble on a second run-through to see if perhaps their stockroom workers had seen the error of their ways and restocked the two shirts we wanted ahead of schedule? Plus it would be amusing trivia to tell people we got into the Celebration Store twice. We’d be, like, hardy adventurers.

Celebration Store Line II!

You’ll note this time you can actually see some of the serpentine walls at far left where no one is standing. Actual empty spaces this time!

The first 25 minutes moved as quickly as they had that morning. Then the line came to a standstill for 20 minutes. We realized our free time was all used up. We’d pushed our luck too far. We backtracked through the line, humbly excusing ourselves while jostling past hundreds of fans still wishing to get into the Store for their first time. It was worth a shot.

A miracle arrived the next day. Thanks to very special intervention from a longtime friend of MCC (a previous costar of ours from Celebration 2005 as well as our 2009 road trip), we were able to acquire the shirts we each coveted without attempting the Store line a third time. Huge shout-out to Mindy for making our modest Star Wars shopping dreams come true, all for marginally less than the cost of Disney theme park tickets.

Donald Glover shirts!

My consolation prize and the thing I wanted most were both Donald Glover shirts. Now I can pretend i have merchandise from Community and Atlanta instead of from Solo: A Star Wars Story.

Star Wars pins!

Anne’s new Star Wars shirt is the backdrop for her Star Wars pin collection, a temporary hobby for that weekend only. So far.

To be continued! Other chapters in this very special maxiseries:

Prologue: Our Star Wars Celebration Chicago 2019 Pre-Show: Who We’ve Already Met
Part Zero: MCC Live-Tweet: Our First Star Wars Celebration Chicago 2019 Line
Part 1: Imperial Cosplay
Part 2: The Right Side of the Force Cosplay
Part 3: Scum and Villainy Cosplay
Part 4: Rising with Skywalkers
Part 5: The Stars in Our Galaxy
Part 6: The Droids We Weren’t Looking For
Part 7: How to Draw Star Wars the Marvel Way
Part 9 of ???: [coming soon]

Star Wars Celebration Chicago 2019 Photos #9: World of Wheels and Wings

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Mustafar truck!

Maybe you’ve seen muscle cars with awesome fire decals, but have you seen a truck engulfed in the very flames of Mustafar?

Previously on Midlife Crisis Crossover:

April 11-15, 2019, was the ninth American edition of Lucasfilm’s Star Wars Celebration, recurring major convention celebrating their works, creations, actors, fans, and merchandise, not always in that order. After jaunts around the U.S. coast and overseas, this year’s was in Chicago, gracing the Midwest with its products for the first time since 2005. My wife Anne and I attended Thursday through Saturday and fled Sunday morning…

Vehicles are one of the key components of the Star Wars Universe. Mechanically inclined fans naturally paid tribute to those motorin’ machines, whether with faithful recreations of starships from the films themselves or with Terran vehicles transformed into eye-popping, street-legal homages.


Star Wars 70s van!

Where there’re muscle cars, there’re vans with fantasy paintings on the side.

BB-8 Beetle!

Looking for something less macho? Try the BB-8 Beetle!

BB-8 VW wagon!

Or upgrade to the BB-8 VW station wagon, the non-macho option for the entire family!

Rebel Alliance sedan!

The Rebel Alliance sedan for your everyday Coruscant commute.

X-Wing battle damage car!

The X-Wing battle-damage car, for supporters of military underdogs.

Astromech tailgunner trailer!

Ask your local car dealer about the optional astromech tailgunner trailer.

tailgate painting!

If you’d rather keep your fandom on the down-low, leave the front paint job as-is, but add flourishes to your tailgate and accessorize with a carbonite bed cover.

If you’d rather settle for an ordinary driving experience, that’s understandable. Celebration also had flying options on display, though none of them offered live demos, which is a shame because an intergalactic air show would’ve been a great fit.

Snowspeeder!

Small-scale Rebel Snowspeeder, well acclimated to the frosty Chicago weather that weekend.

TIE Fighter medium!

A TIE Fighter well above regulation model size.

TIE Fighter!

Alternatively, there was the largest TIE Figther we’ve ever seen. Now we’re talking power vehicles.

TIE Fighter autographs!

One of the colossal TIE Fighter’s wings sported a few classy autographs.

X-Wing!

While the Empire had the tallest ship on the premises, the good guys’ X-Wing Fighter was by far the longest.

Mandalorian speeder bike!

Fans of the modern Star Wars era got their first sneak-peek of The Mandalorian with this speeder bike from the upcoming series parked by the Live Stage..

TX-225 GAVw!

For pure boots-on-the-ground firepower, you can’t go wrong with the TX-225 GAVw tank from Rogue One. with built-in Stormtrooper mannequin.

To be continued! Other chapters in this very special maxiseries:

Prologue: Our Star Wars Celebration Chicago 2019 Pre-Show: Who We’ve Already Met
Part Zero: MCC Live-Tweet: Our First Star Wars Celebration Chicago 2019 Line
Part 1: Imperial Cosplay
Part 2: The Right Side of the Force Cosplay
Part 3: Scum and Villainy Cosplay
Part 4: Rising with Skywalkers
Part 5: The Stars in Our Galaxy
Part 6: The Droids We Weren’t Looking For
Part 7: How to Draw Star Wars the Marvel Way
Part 8: Adventures in Official Merchandising
Part 10: Welcome to Our World of Space Toys
Part 11: [coming soon]
Part 12: [coming soon]

Star Wars Celebration Chicago 2019 Photos #10: Welcome to Our World of Space Toys

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Elite Praetorian Guards!

Elite Praetorian Guards from Kotobukiya. Pricier than you think.

Previously on Midlife Crisis Crossover:

April 11-15, 2019, was the ninth American edition of Lucasfilm’s Star Wars Celebration, recurring major convention celebrating their works, creations, actors, fans, and merchandise, not always in that order. After jaunts around the U.S. coast and overseas, this year’s was in Chicago, gracing the Midwest with its products for the first time since 2005. My wife Anne and I attended Thursday through Saturday and fled Sunday morning…

TOYS! Studies show 106% of all viewers who ever enjoyed a Star Wars film have owned at least one Star Wars toy in their lives. Anne and I don’t actively collect them anymore, but we haven’t yet parted with our respective collections. Frankly, it would take a while. Hers is ten times the size of mine, even after gifting a few extras to kiddie relatives. We nonetheless continue to admire Star Wars toys and toy-like products from afar, amazed at how far toy design technology has come since the ancient times when action figures with more than five movable joints were illegal in forty-two states because too much articulation might encourage naughty posing.

Naturally Lucasfilm invited some of their fanciest licensees to Celebration to display their wares, from the rulers of the commonest big-box toy aisles to the higher-end collectible craftspeople. Each of those vendors also had exclusive Celebration pins for sale, a value-added incentive for window shoppers to take a closer look. When the pin-bug bit Anne, we did a little of exactly that.


Triple-Zero Bandai!

Bandai brings you the sadistic Triple-Zero from the pages of Marvel’s Doctor Aphra.

Bandai Kylo Ren!

More Bandai fun with Kylo Ren and his Stormtroopers.

Kotobukiya Last Jedi!

An alternative Kylo Ren and friends manufactured by Kotobukiya, Japanese toymakers nonpareil.

Kotobukiya Droids!

Kotobukiya’s Triple-Zero, his partner BT-1, and their less deadly friends.

K-2SO Kotobukiya!

K-2SO via Kotobukiya. I just really like droid toys.

EFX Star Destroyer!

EFX Collectibles showcased a variety of models, including this sizable Star Destroyer. You’re gonna need a bigger coffee table.

Hasbro booth!

It wouldn’t be a Star Wars toy show with Hasbro, bearers of the original Kenner torch.

Donald Glover action figure!

Hasbro made me ask myself the hard question of why I don’t yet own a Donald Glover action figure.

Phantom Menace salute!

Hasbro also reminded us The Phantom Menace was twenty years ago, as was that time Anne, my son and I attended the midnight debut of its first wave of action figures at Toys R Us. Good times.

Lego Booth!

Lego showed up and brought their own building tables and Q&A space. Not pictured is their toy section, which looked exactly like the Lego aisle at your nearest Walmart.

Star Wars Bobbleheads 2016!

Someone brought Star Wars Bobbleheads! How quaint.

Funko Pop standard!

Funko Pop killed the Bobblehead star. A common sight at literally every convention we attend, and Celebration was no exception.

Funko Pop Chrome Blue Star Wars Celebration Exclusives!

But Celebration was no mere convention. Funko Pop had their very own booth and sold thousands of Celebration-exclusive blue chrome Star Wars Funko Pops.

…which you weren’t allowed to buy unless you won their lottery. Funko Pops are very rarely our thing, but Anne had a coworker who, upon learning we were attending, decided he was her new best friend and begged her to pick up some of the blue chrome Funko Pops for him if we could. We lost the lottery, which made him a loser vicariously through us.

The preceding photo was taken Thursday before the storm. This was Friday afternoon:

Funko famine!

A veritable Funko famine. They restocked the next morning, but who wants to keep returning to the same booth to beg for shopping privileges?

Funko Pop Gold Chewie!

Funko Pop also brought shiny gold Star Wars characters. No one cared because blue chrome is the new gold. Sorry, Gold Chewie.

To be continued! Other chapters in this very special maxiseries:

Prologue: Our Star Wars Celebration Chicago 2019 Pre-Show: Who We’ve Already Met
Part Zero: MCC Live-Tweet: Our First Star Wars Celebration Chicago 2019 Line
Part 1: Imperial Cosplay
Part 2: The Right Side of the Force Cosplay
Part 3: Scum and Villainy Cosplay
Part 4: Rising with Skywalkers
Part 5: The Stars in Our Galaxy
Part 6: The Droids We Weren’t Looking For
Part 7: How to Draw Star Wars the Marvel Way
Part 8: Adventures in Official Merchandising
Part 9: World of Wheels and Wings
Part 11: [coming soon]
Part 12: [coming soon]

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