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| Comic Creators File Massive Lawsuit Against Action Lab Entertainment Posted: 04 Feb 2022 05:59 AM PST
It would appear that Action Lab has literally entered the “danger zone.” Almost 40 comic book creators have recently joined a proposed class action lawsuit alleging that Action Lab Entertainment, the ailing indie comic book publisher, has failed to meet a slew of contractual duties. As reported by ClassAction.org, the 46-page complaint alleges that, despite promising to print, promote, and market creators’ works, report quarterly sales and income numbers, properly maintain social media accounts, and make a reasonable effort to sell comics, Action Lab has largely failed to do any of these things, and even failed to notify creators when its office closed “without reason.”
The lawsuit also asserts that thousands of content creators have been left hanging, and that the Uniontown, Pennsylvania-based comics company failed to put a “large number of projects” into print, retain enough staff to fulfill its publisher agreements, and pay the individuals timely royalties for their work, among other apparent transgressions, between December 2019 and the spring of 2021.
The plaintiffs include John Reilly, the creator of Herald: Lovecraft & Tesla, Jeremy Whitley the creator of Princeless and Raven the Pirate Princess, the creators of Archon: Battle of the Dragon, Bigfoot: Sword of the Earthman, Baby Badass and Aberrant, among many other titles and creators. The plaintiffs claim that publisher’s agreements for content creators with Action Lab Entertainment were "unconscionable" and should now be declared “null and void”.
According to the complaint, Action Lab president Bryan Seaton, who is also a defendant in the case, left the company in late 2019 without informing the creators, leaving Shawn Pryor in control of day-to-day operations. The Action Lab offices were then closed “without reason” from December 16, 2019 until January 6, 2020, according to the lawsuit, during which time content creators were not paid and no marketing was done. Pryor quickly left Action Lab in January 2020, and Seaton finally informed the comic creators that he “had been incapable of handling the company,” according to the lawsuit. Seaton claims to have quit the next month, leaving Action Lab without a leader.
The lawsuit further asserts that Action Lab stopped down operations again in March 2020 without informing any of its content contributors, and that the defendant “did not perform any work” throughout this time. According to the plaintiffs, all content creators were once again left unpaid. Action Lab’s problems were exacerbated when its distributor, Diamond Comic Distributors also shut down operations in March in response to the pandemic. Action Lab cancelled all scheduled comicbook new releases, stopped distributing sales reports, paid out no money for books sold earlier in the year, then notified creators that Diamond reopened in June 2020 and began shipping new releases that were already in its inventory.
When interviewed last year, Seaton claimed that Action Lab attempted to reopen in July 2020 but was unable to do so until the spring of 2021. Seaton apologized to comic creators in that interview for his lack of communication and “whatever problems our shutdown has caused,” and claimed that Action Lab is “financially very strong and available for business,” but “it takes time to put the pieces together and we need your help,” according to the interview.
According to plaintiffs, Action Lab also did not communicate with creators regarding publishing delays, and frequently outright ignored them, forcing comic creators to have to resort to spending their own money to market and promote their work. They also allege that Action Lab has consistently failed to produce their projects in a timely fashion, frequently failing to publish books on the originally solicited dates, leading to returns, cancellations, and diminished orders from retailers.
"Failing to release a book on time means that it cannot be adequately advertised by creators, who are then unable to schedule signings or events around the release," the complaint relays. "Creators are not informed of changes to solicited release dates and plans."
Apparently Action Lab has even canceled entire series because they concluded that the books had insufficient pre-order numbers, and further compounded the problems on the poor accounting of its business. Per the lawsuit, the publisher not only failed to provide creators with promised sales numbers, but failed to share accurate reports that included sales numbers for ComiXology, a digital comics platform which the plaintiffs add, does not promote any current, upcoming or even their back-catalog books.
Despite Seaton’s claims, the proposed class action presents a picture of a comic book publisher that is terminally mismanaged and has allegedly failed to do the right thing by its content creators on even the most basic level.
Clownfish TV had this to say about the situation.
Other indie creators have told us that when they tried to work with the publisher last year, that the representative was slow to respond, and very cryptic in the communications. This now makes sense given that problems the publisher was going through. How much longer will Action Lab Entertainment be around? That probably depends on how this lawsuit shakes out. The post Comic Creators File Massive Lawsuit Against Action Lab Entertainment appeared first on Bleeding Fool. |
| Author Says Comics Showed “America Was Racist, Violent & Soaked in Sex” Posted: 03 Feb 2022 03:29 PM PST
The Nation reviewed Paul S. Hirsch’s history book, “Pulp Empire: the Secret History of Comic Book Imperialism”, which I’d spoken about in the past year, and their review has some eyebrow raising descriptions like this:
Now this is quite odd to read that far-left news sources, which the Nation magazine is themselves, would ostensibly worry USA comics were depicting the country in negative terms. The Daily Worker was a communist publication that ran mainly during 1921-58, and their alleged stance is hardly what today’s leftists actually favor, when you consider how there’s leftists who want to believe America is a “racist” country, rotten to the core, yet they never show the same concern over any such problems and double-standards outside the country, unless they believe Israel qualifies for scapegoating. Or, more troubling, they won’t look at themselves in the mirror properly, and ask if the left itself continues what it was guilty of in the early centuries of the continent’s history, and whether the left is encouraging an Orwellian atmosphere. Many such leftists are more than perfectly willing to vilify all of Stan Lee’s own hard work as scummy too, despite all his efforts to develop stories that could serve as metaphors for what they’re supposedly concerned about, and with the way censorship’s running amok today, don’t be shocked if one day, they’ll do worse than stand idly by while Lee’s work is shut away in the censorious vault; they’ll justify any such moves full force.
And what do they mean by “relatively mature”? That whoever comprised the audience, child or adult, wasn’t mature enough in their minds? On this, you could argue that, if those who embraced the darkness alluded to here thought that was the only way an “intelligent” tale could be told, that’s where the people in question are sorely mistaken. But they don’t actually get into that, as expected. Other than that, it’s ludicrous if they’re implying comic readers aren’t intelligent enough. The review continues:
Hold on a moment here. Seriously, they think these movies give a questionable view of the USA? Presumably, if they’re more favorable to the USA in general, the Nation doesn’t approve this time around. (Of course, this could be changing with Kevin Feige in charge now, let’s recall.) Also interesting is what’s told about the original Golden Age Daredevil’s creator, Lev Gleason:
Yes, according to Comics Journal, Mr. Gleason had been associated with communism in the 1930s, and it’s admittedly bizarre that somebody who recognized Germany’s fascism as an evil ideology didn’t view Russia’s communism as the same. And to think we wondered how China’s communism became such a bad omen over the years. The Nation continues:
Again, of course it was disturbing if that was the approach they took, rather than make a proper distinction based on ideologies, but again, we have here a liberal magazine with no interest in asking whether leftism itself had any influence on these directions.
Wow, whaddaya know, somebody’s talking about “progressive” here. As though that was actually the case at the time. But today, it alludes to leftists who could be pushing bad ideological influences on the public and school students, like Critical Race Theory that’s harmful to whites. Next:
IMHO, if this is what adults found appealing, it is regrettable. Mainly because of all the missed opportunities to develop more comic tales along the lines of fantasy, drawing from authors like Edgar Rice Burroughs’ Warlord of Mars for inspiration in adventure fare, or more precisely, optimistic adventure with fanciful elements that could prove as uplifting as say, some of the comedies and romances seen in movies at the time. Speaking of which, Movie Show Plus, while reviewing the UK-based film Mothering Sunday a month and a half ago, said romance is “no longer commonly found in mainstream cinema.” That’s all you need to know what’s gone horribly wrong with commercialism these days.
From what I’ve known until now, it was primarily teachers, parental figures and such who led this awful scenario, but obviously, it’d be foolish, as I realize, to think no children, teens or younger folks could’ve been involved as well. And, how intriguing to learn Hoover also played a part in the moral panic over the content of comicdom. Clearly, Wertham was just part of the problem. And on the topic of progressives, again, it says:
Gee, all this coming from far-leftists who aren’t doing much to object to modern censorship and cancel culture, I see. They certainly aren’t protesting when conservatives find their work in jeopardy of the same. And while I don’t think it was good that censorship took hold at the time, I must still object to their terming of “blandness” to describe superheroes, considering I own some of that stuff myself in paperback/hardcover archives, and for its time, all those old DC/Marvel adventures were wonderful stuff, which I’m sure would’ve made waves even if censorship hadn’t occurred. By the way, do they know comics are still serving propaganda goals, far more for left-wing causes than ever before? Always strange they don’t want to discuss it from a modern perspective.
At that time, anti-war movements or not, nobody denied communism was a concern. But today, it’s a whole different story, and you don’t usually see far-left scribes tackling the issue of communism seriously. And even if the war in ‘Nam was a fiasco, that doesn’t mean the definition of anti-war itself – which basically amounted to opposition to fighting just battles – is something to appreciate, and it wasn’t. As noted, Marvel took an anti-commie stance (and DC did too, even if theirs was more metaphorical), and if they hadn’t, their stories wouldn’t have had the impact they did. Yet today’s leftists simply won’t condemn communism convincingly, as Lee and company did in their time, which’ll prove part of Marvel’s undoing in the end.
Hmm, I wonder how they feel now that Maus ran the gauntlet of being shunned by schools, as noted earlier? As for Watchmen, I’m sorry, but considering how pessimist its overall vision was, that’s why I just can’t appreciate it. Especially after DC began turning out needless followups with the cast of characters in the past several years, which actually diminishes whatever impact it had to begin with. As for Hollywood, all they “recognized” was dollar signs, not art that can make you think.
Here’s the problem: if they’re alluding to more recent publications from Marvel/DC, those brand new items don’t really address these issues well at all, because they go by political correctness and wokeness. Then again, they seem to be alluding to the movies, and WW84, if anything, “addressed” these subjects very poorly. And in hindsight, it’s honestly ludicrous a movie spotlighting a murderous villain like the Joker should be considered a big deal. No matter how much I appreciate Batman, this obsession with darkness has ruined everything. Especially when you consider how the emphasis on Batman comes at the expense of more elaborate science fiction ingredients, like what Superman offered years before. At the end:
I think not. Despite the accurate notation comicdom’s become 2nd to all the merchandise, it still sounds pretentious, and it’s better not to waste time on a sequel. Definitely not if the author won’t give a meaty description how Marvel/DC went down the PC drain since the turn of the century, and destroyed only so much coherency as they went along. There’s dozens of writers and artists these days whose work I cannot stand, some of whom came about by the turn of the century themselves, and have proven insufferable ever since. And it’s something would-be historians like Hirsch are unlikely to ever comment on in a future book.
Originally published here. The post Author Says Comics Showed "America Was Racist, Violent & Soaked in Sex” appeared first on Bleeding Fool. |
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