Articles for February, 2017

Scandal Star Kerry Washington Has a Problem–a Popcorn Problem
There's reason to celebrate on Scandal: Mellie Grant is going to be president! Or is she? In the Thursday, Feb. 9 episode, Cyrus Beene (Jeff Perry) was taken into custody for killing Francisco...
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Diamond Is One With The Force And The Force Is With The New Rogue One PREVIEWS Exclusive Figures
(BALTIMORE, MD) – (February 09, 2017) – The Empire and Rebellion clash at local comic shops as Diamond Comic Distributors and Beast Kingdom offer more selections from their line of PREVIEWS Exclusive (PX) Egg Attack Figures. The Rebellion’s new U-Wing fighter utilizes unique electromagnetic attraction and repulsion principles to float in the air—unveiled just before...
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#DoctorWho : The Return of Doctor Mysterio with bonus content on Blu-ray and DVD February 21 from BBC Home Entertainment
BBC Home Entertainment is bringing Doctor Who: The Return of Doctor Mysterio to Blu-ray and DVD in two weeks, with previously unannounced bonus content.   Catch up on the Doctor’s latest adventure with Doctor Who: The Return of Doctor Mysterio on Blu-ray and DVD February 21, 2017, with newly announced bonus content.   DOCTOR WHO:...
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How to Get Away With Murder’s Billy Brown Has a Warning for You: It’s Only Getting Darker From Here
If, after watching tonight's new episode of How to Get Away With Murder, you thought things couldn't much darker than Wes' body going missing--and Nate getting framed for it--while...
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Grey’s Anatomy Explains Alex’s Fate But Starts a War
All is well in the land of Alex Karev (Justin Chambers). After Bailey (Chandra Wilson) told Ben (Jason George) about Karev's plan to take the plea deal and go to jail, Ben told...
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The Vampire Diaries Comes to an End: Check Out the Cast Getting Emotional As Filming Wraps
The Vampire Diaries has officially wrapped filming forever, and if you think we're not getting emotional about it, you had better think again. As if to make the tears fall harder,...
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Go Nuts with Ryan North, Shannon Hale and Dean Hale

Marvel.com is thrilled to give its readers an *exclusive* interview with three notable and bestselling authors Ryan North, Shannon Hale and Dean Hale, who all have something in common—SQUIRREL GIRL! With new and exciting Squirrel Girl adventures coming your way monthly by Ryan North, from Marvel Comics, and the Hales penning an all-original novel from Marvel Press called THE UNBEATABLE SQUIRREL GIRL: SQUIRREL MEETS WORLD (on sale now), now would be the perfect time to crack into what makes Doreen Green so unbeatably awesome!

Marvel.com: Who is Doreen Green to you, and why do you enjoy writing her?

Shannon Hale: She is a girl with a squirrel tail and squirrel powers, and she thinks that’s pretty awesome. You can’t help but agree with her. In our book, she’s in middle school, which is a time when I could really have used squirrel powers.

Dean Hale: She is humanity’s last best hope against nihilistic apocalypse. Also she is Tippy-Toe’s best friend, which means I get to write squirrel dialogue. I love squirrel dialogue.

Ryan North: In the Marvel comic she’s also a computer science student at university, so she’s got powers of both squirrel AND girl, and also computer scientist. Pretty unbeatable if you ask me, which is why it was such a relief when we put “unbeatable” on the cover. That way everyone was going into this with their eyes open!!

Shannon Hale: Truth in advertising is our number one goal.

Marvel.com: Because Squirrel Girl appeals to readers of all ages and genders, did you all listen to reader feedback while you wrote her storylines or does her voice just speak to you?

Shannon Hale: Personally my best prep for writing her was to read and reread Ryan’s comics. His voice is so good.

Dean Hale: ABSOLUTELY. Ryan and Erica’s book dials it right in. Because of course I don’t hear Squirrel Girl’s voice in my head talking to me always talking that would be crazy

Ryan North: AW YOU GUYS. To come up with how Doreen talked, I kept Erica Henderson’s art (she’s the artist on the book) up on a screen while I wrote. She’d just done different character sketches at that point – she didn’t even know what tone the book would have! – but even those had such character and personality to them that I just had to look at them and think “what would this person do in this situation?” and it really helped. We ended up putting those sketches on as a special variant cover for our 25th anniversary issue in January (25th anniversary of the character, I mean, we haven’t been writing these comics and novels for 25 years) (YET??)

Marvel.com: Ryan, have there been any story arcs that resonated with you, personally, or that you were adamant about tackling within the Squirrel girl comics?

Ryan North: The first arc was really special to me because (SPOILER ALERT FOR A 2 YEAR OLD COMIC) it’s the one where we meet Nancy, meet Doreen, and she goes up against Galactus. That was right there in my first pitch: that she’d defeat Galactus. She’s unbeatable, right? Let’s come out of the gate with the most unbeatable Marvel bad guy there is! It was also special for me because Nancy finding out Doreen’s secret identity wasn’t part of the story originally, it just happened organically when I realized that Nancy’s smart, she’d notice if there were two squirrels in a pink ribbon in her life all of a sudden. And that realization made Nancy and Doreen much closer (and helped me realize that Nancy’s superpower, if she has one, is seeing through people’s baloney), and now their relationship is one of my favourite parts of the book.

Ryan North
Shannon and Dean Hale

Marvel.com: Shannon and Dean, given that you had a nice volume of SG work to read through, did you find any challenges when it came to writing a character who was already “formed” in readers’ minds, and what will readers discover about her after reading your novel?

Shannon Hale: We got to write Doreen at age fourteen, just as she’s claiming her superhero identity. Basically we thought, who would Ryan’s and Erica’s Doreenl have been in middle school? They’d done so much great discovery into her character. It was a joy to play in that sandbox.

Dean Hale: It was perfect to have that target in mind and imagine up the kind of girl that could one day become the one we see in the comics now.

Marvel.com: Shannon and Dean, you also were able to add some meaningful characters into Doreen’s world. Can you talk a little about her parents and best friend Ana Sofia?

Shannon Hale: Doreen loves people, and so moving to a new town the first thing she does is hunt out both squirrel and human friends. She’s such an optimistic, outgoing, indomitable personality, we thought it’d be fun to pair her with someone who is introverted and somewhat prickly. Ana Sofía is a computer whiz, Mexican American, deaf, and completely unprepared for the storm that is Doreen Green. She’s also an openly huge fan of socks and a secretly huge fan of Thor. I loved writing Ana Sofía.

Dean Hale: Doreen’s parents are a huge part of the person she is, especially in a story that deals with her at a time when she’s still living at home. It was great fun reverse-engineering Doreen’s personality DNA to come up with people that would have created a home environment where a Being such as Squirrel Girl could form.

Ryan North: Can I jump in here? I LOVE ANA SOFÍA. Ever since I first read what Shannon and Dean wrote here I’ve wanted to at least give a shout out to Ana Sofía in the book, but I had to hold back because I couldn’t put her in the comic before she showed up in the book! It’d be like I was stealing her. But now the book is coming out REAL SOON and the world will know how great Ana Sofía is.

Shannon Hale: Wow that is so cool. It’s already amazing to get to write in the Marvel Universe, how much more amazing to get to add a character to the canon!

Marvel.com: Besides being unbeatable, what are some other attributes about Squirrel Girl that make her so special to write about and that you want young readers to resonate with?

Shannon Hale: She’s got powerful, thick thighs, and round cheeks, and big front teeth, and a big booty to boot (especially with her tail hidden in her pants)—and in middle school these are things that kids will mock. But Doreen is really okay with herself. I love that.

Dean Hale: There’s a creeping undercurrent of hope in everything she does and says that has a kind of therapeutic effect. After spending any length of time in her head, I find myself much more willing to believe that stuff IRL is going to be okay. Being a kid (and a non-kid) is hard, and I would love it if young (and old) readers could leave the book with a little of that hope in their lives.

Ryan North: She’s very empathic – good at seeing the world from the point of view of other characters – which I think is PROBABLY a good thing to have when you’ve got literal superpowers? She’s also great at kicking butts too, which is also great. So kicking butts and empathy are a fun combination that I think Doreen / Squirrel Girl show really well.

Marvel.com: For casual readers of comics or for parents who want to get their daughters and sons into them, do you have any comics recommendations or favorites within your household?

Shannon Hale: Well obviously start with Ryan’s Squirrel Girl comics. They really are All Ages—for kids, teens, and adults. Ms Marvel is fantastic for middle schoolers and teens. I also have a graphic novel I’m constantly recommending for younger readers: EL DEAFO by Cece Bell. Love!

Dean Hale: For older kids I often recommend the first trade of Runaways. Also Ultimate Spider-Man, both the old-school Bendis one and the new show tie-in comic. Moon Girl and Devil Dinosaur, too. Love that one.

Ryan North: I’d echo all those recommendations, and add on Hellcat from Marvel, Adventure Time comics from Boom! (I wrote those too, so uh, if you like Squirrel Girl you’ll probably like that – as well?), Calvin and Hobbes collections remain timeless and brilliant, and my friend Kean Soo did a book a few years ago called “Jellaby” about a girl who finds a monster in her back yard, feeds him a tuna fish sandwich, and they become friends. SUPER GREAt.

Marvel.com: What’s on your comic book TBR (To Be Read) pile right now?

Dean Hale: Mark Waid’s Champions, Margaret Stohl’s Captain Marvel, several issues of Ta-Nehisi Coates’ Black Panther, and the second trade of Tom King’s Vision.

Shannon Hale: That’s my TBR too since we share the same TBR. I’m dying to read Margaret’s Captain Marvel. I love her. The character and the writer. I love both hers.

Ryan North: Hahaha I’ve got so much. I literally just came back from the library to pick up books I’d put on hold, and the holds pickup section is right next to the comics section, so every time I go I’m just pouring comic books into my hands almost at random. But I’m very excited for the (every award winning) book March by John Lewis, Andrew Aydin, and Nate Powell, about the US Civil Rights movement – it’s been on my to-read pile for far too long and I can’t wait to dig in.

Readers can also check out these three authors on tour, which kicks off on February 7!

Tuesday, February 7, 2017 – 7:00pm
(Shannon and Dean Hale only The King’s English)
1511 South 1500 East
Salt Lake City, UT 84105

Wednesday, February 8, 2017 – 7:00 PM
B&N store #2984
Mira Mesa Market Center
10775 Westview Pkwy
San Diego, CA 92126

Thursday, February 9, 2017 – 7:00 PM
B&N store #2262
Clackamas Town Center
12000 SE 82nd Ave
Portland, OR 97086

Friday, February 10, 2017 – 7:00 PM
B&N store #2280
Northgate Mall
301 NE Northgate Way
Seattle, WA 98125

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Gordon Ramsay’s Advice for Masterchef Jr. Contestants Is Advice For All of Us
Gordon Ramsay may be a professional TV chef, but he's also known for his tendency to tell it exactly like it is to the grown up chefs on his various TV shows, and to also tell it using as many...
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Green Arrow Recaps
Green Arrow Recaps [dc-custom:livefyre_app_full] Read more
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Mosaic: Welcoming Committee

Since the life he knew disappeared into cloud of green mist and a cocoon, Morris Sackett has been struggling to find solid ground, some kind of support he could rely on. Thus far, his attempts to do so have been stymied by the lack of a physical body and betrayals large and small.

However, on March 8 in MOSAIC #6, Sackett may find a sense of belonging in a community of people he will have never met before that moment. We reached writer Geoffrey Thorne as he set the table for the Inhuman family reunion to ask him what readers—and Morris—might be in store for.

Marvel.com: Obviously, Morris’ Inhuman physiology has altered his life in massive ways. However, before he was ever exposed to the Mist, did Sackett have any awareness of the Inhumans as a people or a community? Did he have any feelings towards them?

Geoffrey Thorne: [Laughs] Prior to terrigenesis Morris couldn’t have told you the difference between a mutant and an Inhuman and wouldn’t have cared what that difference was. They’d just have been one more group of super-powered people in the background of his awesome life.

If he ever saw them at all he’d have probably focused on Medusa and Crystal—by far the most famous of the Inhumans because of their contact with the Fantastic Four—and filed them both as “hot.” Beyond that, he wouldn’t have cared.

Marvel.com: Considering how much his life has changed, and so quickly, one imagines he must have strong feelings about the Inhumans. Any insight into the nature of those?

Geoffrey Thorne: Spoilers. But issues #6 and #7 deal almost exclusively with the relationship between Morris and the Inhumans. His encounter with them definitely puts him through his paces.

Marvel.com: Which Inhumans does Morris encounter?

Geoffrey Thorne: Flint, Nur, Medusa, Chrystal, Iso, Lockjaw; really a whole stack of them.

Marvel.com: As best as you can without spoiling things, can you describe how Mosaic and the Inhumans end up in each other’s orbit?

Geoffrey Thorne: Spoilers. But these two issues catch [the] MOSAIC timeline up with the rest of the [Marvel Universe].

Marvel.com: How aware are they of his existence until this point?

Geoffrey Thorne: The Inhumans keep tabs on as many of the cocoons caused by the terrigen clouds as they can. Some they miss, of course, but Morris was cocooned in a fairly public fashion. They probably would have contacted him but he was declared dead before they could get to it. Until this moment, they assumed he was dead, just as the rest of the world does. Plus he’s impossible to find in his current state.

Marvel.com: What are the Inhumans’ feelings about or impressions of Sackett?

Geoffrey Thorne: Some like him. Some find him a useful tool. Some think he’s a jerk.But he’s considered one of the family as soon as he appears to them.

Marvel.com: What is your approach to depicting the Inhumans? What elements did you feel were key to capturing their essence?

Geoffrey Thorne: Hmmm. I don’t if I had any particular approach. I’ve loved the Inhumans since I was a kid so I feel extremely comfortable writing them.  They are a proud ancient people currently under siege by some of the most powerful people in the Marvel Universe. When Morris meets them—just prior to Civil War II—Queen Medusa is about to make a series of fairly tough decisions.

Morris, as we’ve seen in [UNCANNY INHUMANS #11] gets caught up in her plans.

Marvel.com: How does this interaction fit into the larger fabric of the Inhumans as a group in a period of massive upheaval?

Geoffrey Thorne: Morris has been on the run since emerging from the cocoon. Life’s been kicking him pretty hard for the first few days of his time as an Inhuman. Meeting the rest of the “family” now is sort of the first time he gets a chance to breathe and he only gets the chance for a little while before he’s drawn into their conflicts with the super hero community and the mutants.

It’s a head spinner, for sure.

The fallout of these two conflicts will determine much of Morris’ future both as it relates to the Inhumans and as he relates to the world.

Be there for an Inhuman family reunion on March 8 in MOSAIC #6!

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