This past weekend was the excellent New York Comic-Con. I've just about recovered from it. I had a busy show, appearing on ConTV, doing two signings at IDW, and teaching a drawing class. I would have liked to have been at the table more, but it's the perils of being popular, I suppose. Sales were good, and I think I may do more commissions in NYC than anywhere else. I've got some regulars who like to challenge me, including doing a Teen Titans/Star Wars mashup, and a Princess Leia pony. (The hard part there: Figuring out her Cutie Mark.)
I also had a fantastic time after the show. Great friends and great conversations at great restaurants. I had marrow, or "meat butter" for the first time! Cucumber soju continues to be my kryptonite. And New York pizza is still New York pizza… which means tasty but no Chicago pizza.
The highlight of my nights was when Tony Fleecs and I got to go see the taping of Saturday Night Live, as well as getting a tour afterwards and hanging out with some of the writers. Seeing SNL live has been on my Bucket List for a while, and it was great to check that off. It is so much better, so much funnier in person. It's amazing to see what they do to make that show happen in such a small space, and how great the band is to perform flawlessly while so much is going on around them. It was definitely a treat, and I don't know how much I should say about how this trip happened, but thanks Person Who Arranged It! Thank you so much!
The other highlight happened at the show when a mother came up with her daughter who was in my drawing class. I taught a higher-level class because it was mostly teens in the class, but her younger daughter was there and just absorbed the whole thing. She always liked to draw and took classes in previous years, but her mother said that she saw the light go on in her daughter's head in that class, and that I was going to be "her memory" of learning to draw.
I like doing what I do, but I can get a little cavalier about it. Moments like that remind me how I can actually have an impact on people. It's very humbling.
A big thank you to everyone who came by. I hope I gave some good advice to the Kubert School students who stopped. Thank you to everyone who came by and said kind things about Long Distance. That book is finding an audience in ways I never would have expected.
I'm looking forward to next year already!