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Part 2D: Derry Comics Festival, The Black Panel Tour
Following on from last week's report, the indie comix tour picked up at Sandino's Bar in Derry for the fourth annual 2D Festival in Derry, NI.
Or rather outside the bar. The pavement has some seating (and twenty kegs), and as 2D "raises the bar", each year the street fills further.
Inside, I was missing the ‘Social Commentary in Comics’ panel where Pat Mills spoke about Crisis, and ‘Everyone’s a Critic’, (photo above) which didn't seem to have much focus in the twenty minutes I sat in it. (Though Ron from the Sunnyside Podcast was throwing out some great comedy moments.) On top of the drink and the food I came down with a dose of professional jealousy. I've slogged away at comics criticism for a decade. Oh well, I groaned. I'd wanted to put more time into making comics anyhow. (Skeptical readers can look out for my appearance at the Breaking into Comics panel in 2017 folks.)
This was pretty much the end of my getting any more professional revenue from the 2D Festival 2010. The rest of the evening was spent having my
stomach operated on watching Mark Stafford dance like a Baachanalite pro.
Conversing with Phil Barrett, Paddy Brown, Ger Hankey and Aiden, the editor of Irish language comic, Ri-Ra.
I'd managed to drive all but Phil away, spreading my arms over the back of the dumpster, beckoning for a fight.
"2000 AD ain't shit! Come on, why should I should read 2000 AD? It's not so feckin great. Who's man enough? Give me five good reasons. Bring it!"
After Phil had calmed me down on the mob's behalf, Ger and Aiden returned. The conversation led to the importance of the Transformers comic in our growing up. (Ger Hankey is the quintessential Transformers professional: his portfolio captures the height of it's powers: sign up someone!) Every week, we were delivered a cultural injection of action adventure morality in original narrative and cosmic art.
"Lew Stringer", said Aiden.
Lew Stringer is the artist behind Brickman, The Suburban Satanists, Robo-Capers and Combat Colin. The latter two ran in Transformers, and Stringer's pieces apppeared in most of the 332 issues of the series. So Aiden theorised that the comic's success was due to him. Redeeming myself, I agreed that Lew's work formed a central part of this generation's cultural consciousness.

I've long been convinced Mark Millar gets way more column inches than he deserves. In soliciting big name creatives Johnathan Ross and Frankie Boyle in his forthcoming CLint
comic through UK newsstands, he'd earn his current attention. But where was Lew Stringer in all of this?
How could we, one mankind, united brother to brother and sister by Lew's good works, have a regular British comic without content from Lew Stringer? So, I staggered to the hostel, and created a petition, and fell asleep. I figured this was the kind of thing to do while drunk.
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