The blog of Brian Kirsten

BitTorrent and Why Publishers Should go Digital

Jenny, our wonderful rep from Diamond noticed that Watchmensch had hit the torrent/free download sites. She asked if we minded being torrent-ed and for my opinion of the push for publishers to going digital and then possibly later moving their books to print. Here's my reply: As far as how I feel about the downloading thing, part of me is flattered. We aren't a really big company and when I see this sort of stuff I think "Wow someone took the time and scanned this whole thing. I've got pictures sitting on my desk screaming to be scanned and I'm too lazy to scan them." I went ahead and downloaded the scan and whoever did it did a really good job. Will it turn into more orders? I don't think so (I've put requests to Rapidshare and Demonoid to remove the files/torrents). But it's this sort of thing that has moved us (Brain Scan) into the digital world, we've got a couple of new books we went the digital route with, our belief is that the new creators will build an audience and drive them towards a printed collection. The big issue we see with the whole idea is that most creators don't do a whole lot of planning, they think "the first issue will pay for my gloriously planned-out multi-issue series" and when the money isn't what they expect they disappear like turtles in their shell. A lot of folks think if they release a book and just disappear folks will flock to them. It sadly doesn't work that way. Offering our books digitally allows folks to experience "us" with little upfront cost, and it's instant gratification. Now that I'm living on my iPhone I want to grab that new issue from an up-and-coming creative team now, not wait for Amazon or my LCS to deliver. With blogs, Facebook, Twitter, etc. the small publisher can build their brand with little cost and if folks love you and your brand they'll buy your stuff. We all hope. :) On top of it all, me and my little family moved to Boston back in July into a much smaller apartment. Guess what didn't come along? A whole lot of longboxes that are now living at my parents house. In their place I've been picking up graphic novels, because we just don't have the space. A download is nothing but space on that computer or phone. It should be an interesting year for publishers big and small, we'll see how it turns out. Hopefully for the better.

Filed under  //   Book   Brain Scan Studios   Ranting  

Reviews from across the web!

Watchmensch fever has struck the internet, reviews are starting to pop-up here and there. We've had reviews from the good folks at i09, New Breed of Nerd and Slashfilm. Occasional Superheroine also had some very kind words:

Watchmensch is important supplementary material to both the Watchmen graphic novel and film that fans and media alike should read. Because the comic book provides, in a highly fanciful and irreverent way, interesting (though subjective) background information on the movie event of the Spring.
Lewis Lovhaug's Revolution of the Mask is also building steam, blowshimselfupdude had nothing but kind words in his audio/video review of issue #1. Watchmensch will be available in comic book shops in mid-March, Revolution of the Mask is available now in PDF and CBR format at Lulu, Wowio and Cruxy.com.

Filed under  //   Brain Scan Studios   Comics   Revolution of the Mask   Watchmensch   Wowio  

Brain Scan Studios to publish Watchmensch

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Boston, MA December 22, 2008 - Brain Scan Studios proudly presents Watchmensch a parody of...you know.

After one of them is murdered, a team of lawyers who have had dealings with the comics industry must band together again against a conspiracy. But who is trying to kill Nite Nurse, Spottyman, Silk, 1700 Broadway Manhattan and Ozzyosbourne? And what is the cloned creature about to be dropped on New York City?

From the writer of Civil Wardobe and Lying In The Gutters comes this nine-panel-grid parody of comics, the comics industry, the movies they spawn and the creators that get trampled on. Oy vey.

24 pages B+W with full color covers.

Previews Order #: JAN094081 ISBN: 9780615234182

Watchmensch will be available in comic shops everywhere in March 2009. Visit the Brain Scan Studios website for more information.

Brain Scan Studios is an alternative media company based out of Boston, MA that publishes a variety of blogs and creator-owned comics. www.brainscanstudios.com

Filed under  //   Brain Scan Studios   Civil Wardrobe   Comics   Projects   Watchmensch  

Brain Scan Studios to publish Revolution of the Mask

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Boston, MA Sept 27, 2008 - Brain Scan Studios proudly presents Revolution of the Mask, an exciting 12 issue maxi-series that returns superheroes to a unrecognizable Earth that discarded individuality.

After a Final War that decimated the planet, Earth's population now exists as 'The All.' Individuality is irrelevant and everyone belongs to everyone else. However, a revolution is coming - not of murder and mayhem, but of capes and costumes. This is the Revolution of the Mask. This issue: Designation Gamma-117 knows there's something wrong with the world, but only someone Wonderful can tell him what it is.

Revolution of the Mask will be available in e-book format on Oct 1st. Visit the Brain Scan Studios website for more information.

Brain Scan Studios is an alternative media company based out of Boston, MA that publishes a variety of blogs and creator-owned comics. www.brainscanstudios.com

Filed under  //   Brain Scan Studios   Comics   Revolution of the Mask  

Censorship at Wowio?

I'm a small time comic book publisher. Brain Scan Studios doesn't really have a particular genre, we just love publishing what we think are great comics. Recently Brain Scan Studios moved towards e-book publishing, it's a business decision that I think many small publishers will move to and as the distribution options open up more ways to monetize the content will be available to publishers and the creators they publish. Wowio caught our eye sometime last year, they had an interesting business model and there wasn't a major barrier of entry for publishers (large and small) to get Wowio to "distribute" books to their audience. The only major negative was the requirement that folks had to be from the US. But being a small publisher we understood that getting any audience is better than none, so we signed up with Wowio. We had decent success. All was well until several months ago, when Wowio mysteriously was shuttered and it was discovered that they were being purchased by Platinum Studios. A wave of nervousness ran through the ranks of publishers with books currently being distributed by the service, with questions on rights/ownership and payment changes. Wowio relaunched resembling a web comics outfit with a store attached. The current site offers the ability to "sell" your product through them, either by traditional means with Wowio taking a cut of the income or offering the end user a free advertiser "sponsored" download of the publishers content. After combing through the contract additions with a fine toothed comb, we signed up to the "new" Wowio, because as we all know your content might be great but you need folks to distribute it to get it into the hands of the awaiting public. So after all this exposition on the hows-and-whys of Wowio, here's the crux of this blog post. Brain Scan Studios released a new comic anthology called "Serial", by the talented team of David Hayes, Kurt Belcher, Kevin Moyers and others. The series is about real serial killers, it's history, completely non-fiction about how twisted the mind of man can really be. We submitted the book to Wowio and received this message several days later:

Thank you for submitting the book for review. We cannot post the book to the Web site due to the nature of the content.
Very odd I thought. I didn't recall any content restrictions on Wowio, I assumed all the major taboos are rejected on the service but Serial doesn't even have nudity. It's violent but this is history. Men did what is being talked about it in this, it isn't Jason or Leatherface, real people existed on our planet that did these things. On top of it all there's an option during the book submission process that indicated whether or not the book was "mature readers", which was selected for Serial. We resubmitted the book with the following comment:
Can I get some more details on why this was rejected? It's a mature readers book.
We received the following a few days later.
The quality of the book is very good. However, the combination of serial killer content that is based actual events and comic book imagery is especially dark. We feel the instructional guide on how to strangle a victim and achieve sexual gratification in the Gacy story is too edgy. Also, the first person description of attacking, dismembering and consuming a victim in the Fish story, along with the thought process of deciding whether to sexually assault the victim, is not a good match for our comic book readership.
Whenever your book is rejected by Wowio you receive the administrators comments via email. So I responded back with the following:
Is there official documentation on what we can and cannot submit? I don't recall content restrictions in the contract we signed. What also defines the term "Mature" during the submission process of a book?
This email bounced back. Wonderful. So I'll resubmit Serial with my comments and see what I get back. The question I have to ask, what is Wowio? Is Wowio a local store offering books and comics with a "Mature" section that it hides from public eye? If they follow that model then sure, they have the right to stock whatever they want. But I thought their tagline is "Free Books + Free Minds"? Which to me would indicate a very diverse set of content for a range of people. I think that Wowio is nothing but a magazine. They have a ton of content that's ad funded and they have to keep those advertisers happy. I'm wondering how much content has been "pruned" out of the new Wowio because of "mature content". Because you know that Wowio's advertisers don't want their logos next to a book that they might be considered pornographic or extremely violent. (We could go into the delicious irony that a major sponsor of Wowio is EA video games, but that topic should be for another blog post.) What also got me in the prior comments by Wowio's submissions department was this "...is not a good match for our comic book readership", OUR comic readership? What do you mean OUR? That term is rather odd, isn't the readership people looking for new content, whatever their tastes might be? Is Wowio claiming they only cater to certain people/demographics? This won't stop me from submitting content to Wowio, I'll just have to be sure the content caters to their mysterious demographic. Another irony is that on Wowio our most popular books so far are Fiendish Fables and Humpday both falling into the "horror" genre. So there must be an audience for it on Wowio. On a side note Serial is available in DRM free PDF format on Cruxy and Lulu. Update: Serial is now also available in DRM free CBR format at Cruxy.

Filed under  //   Brain Scan Studios   Business   Wowio  

Brain Scan Studios to publish Serial

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Orlando, FL July 1, 2008 - Brain Scan Studios proudly presents Serial, a new monthly anthology series spotlighting famous, infamous and virtually unknown real serial killers. Laid out and reminiscent classic horror anthologies of the 50s, each issue features a 10-page main story, 6-page back up story and a 4-page spotlight story. The inaugural issue features John Wayne Gacy, Angel Resendiz and Albert Fish.

Featuring the creative team of David Hayes, Kurt Belcher, Kevin Moyers and many more, Serial #1 is 24 pages of truly terrifying serial killer tales. It will be available July 2nd in e-book format, visit the Brain Scan Studios website for more information. Mature readers.

Brain Scan Studios is an alternative media company based out of Orlando, FL that publishes a variety of blogs and creator-owned comics. www.brainscanstudios.com

Filed under  //   Brain Scan Studios   Comics   Projects   Serial  
Posted July 2, 2008

Zombies and Dog Catchers Debut in HumpDay, a Comic Book Mini-Series Created by Adam Buechler

Zombies and Dog Catchers Debut in HumpDay, a Comic Book Mini-Series Created by Adam Buechler

Brain Scan Studios just made hunting zombies a little more interesting and entertaining with Adam Buechler’s HumpDay comic book mini-series.

Orlando, FL, June 1, 2008 – Being a “dog-catcher” doesn’t mean catching cute puppies. It’s more like hunting the undead, as readers of the upcoming book Hump Day, created by Adam Beuchler, will find out. Buechler has partnered with Brain Scan Studios to create a mini-series of the comic in e-book format.

The initial concept of HumpDay was born in 2005 over a span of nine days of creative thinking and talented artistry. The series is a humorous take on Zombie mythology.

The main characters are Ed and Jake who are “dog-catchers” that have been specifically trained to go into tourist areas (like Paris, France) and destroy the hordes of undead tourists and vacationers who died while overseas. One thing, in accordance with certain laws and guidelines, dog-catchers are only permitted to destroy their particular homeland’s undead (ie: American soldiers can only kill American Zombie tourists). With extreme emphasis on being politically correct, tempers easily flair between governments. For Ed and Jake this could mean the end!

The intriguing story line may bring to mind a horror comic, but this mini-series interestingly portrays a light- hearted look at Zombies and blue-collar living as these two underachievers (Ed and Jake) drudge their way through Paris, slacking off while still trying to meet their Zombie quotas. And at the same time staying in touch with reality by discussing the mundane aspects of getting by from day to day in the world.

Beuchler’s artistic style has matured since the initial release of the comic series, but has remained true to his original artwork. The mini-series will soon be available to comic lovers the world over, details can be found at: www.tendart.org. For more information, contact Brian Kirsten at Brain Scan Studios, brian.kirsten@brainscanstudios.com.

Adam Buechler is the writer/artist/creator of the mini-series and HumpDay is the first of his works. Brain Scan Studios is an alternative media company based out of Orlando, FL that publishes a variety of blogs and creator-owned comics. www.brainscanstudios.com.

Filed under  //   Brain Scan Studios   Comics   Day   Hump  
Posted June 4, 2008

The Big Word Project

Brian over at Fairly Useless directed me over to The Big Word Project. The concept is simple, you purchase a word to redefine it. The redefinition is in the form of a link, so naturally

we bought "publisher" and linked it to us.

Filed under  //   Brain Scan Studios   Interesting Links  

A trip to Animal Kingdom

The closing of CompUSA allowed me to finally get my hands on Final Cut Studio. Here's my first video with it, all of us at Animal Kingdom. Music by muggle fx, song title "Close calls land slides". Link to the video on Youtube.

Filed under  //   Brain Scan Studios   My Projects   Travel   Video