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DC to launch graphic novel line aimed at girls!

Rachel the Great's picture
Rachel the Great - Saturday, November 25, 2006 - 20:15

It's about time one of the Big Three publishers started courting female readers!

Here's the New York Times article (reprinted so you can read it long after it leaves the public archives, but if it is still up, you can find more pictures at the original article):

"It's time we got teenage girls reading comics," said Karen Berger, a senior vice president at DC Comics. And DC, the comics powerhouse best known as home to Superman and Batman, has a program to make that happen.

In May, DC plans to introduce Minx, a line of graphic novels aimed at young adult female readers, starting with six titles in 2007, each retailing for less than $10. The stories will be far removed from the superheroes who more typically appeal to young males. They include "Clubbing," about a London party girl who solves a mystery; "Re-Gifters," about a Korean-American teenager in California who enjoys martial arts; and "Good as Lily," about a young woman who meets three versions of herself at different ages.

Teenage girls, Ms. Berger said, are smart and sophisticated and "about more than going out with the cute guy. This line of books gives them something to read that honors that intelligence and assertiveness and that individuality."

As a whole, the line is positioned as an alternative for teenage girls who have, especially in bookstores, become increasing smitten with the Japanese comics known as manga. In 2004, DC started CMX, a manga imprint, to capture part of that audience. The marketing then was similar to that used for DC's other titles.

With Minx, though, DC has taken what, for it, is the unusual step of seeking outside help. It has joined with Alloy Marketing + Media to promote Minx. All told, DC, a unit of Time Warner, will spend $125,000 next year to push the line.

"In terms of consumer marketing, it’s got to be the largest thing we've done in at least three decades," said Paul Levitz, the president and publisher of DC Comics. "It's not large by the scale of consumer marketing and advertising as it's done in America, but it's a large-scale commitment, I think, for a publishing company in general."

Alloy Entertainment, a division of the marketing company, has helped to make hits of books like "Gossip Girls" and "The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants." Alloy was also the so-called book packager behind "How Opal Mehta Got Kissed, Got Wild and Got a Life," a first novel by a 19-year-old Harvard sophomore named Kaavya Viswanathan that was pulled from stores earlier this year when it was learned that numerous passages had been copied from novels by other writers.

Still, Alloy is offering DC access to a large audience of teenage girls, through Web sites and the Delia's shopping catalog, which has a mailing list of nearly five million, according to Samantha Skey, Alloy's senior vice president for strategic marketing. Ms. Skey said Minx would be the first graphic novel publisher to be included in the catalog.

Along with other initiatives, Alloy plans to create online networks about the novels that will let subscribers write reviews, see previews and sketches or discuss the stories.

DC cast a wide net in seeking those stories. "To us it doesn’t matter if the person has written comics before or is known to the comic book market," Ms. Berger said. "We want writers who can really write to the demographic and to really bring something new to the table."

The right creative team is important. "When you had mostly boys and men making comics, you had comics made mainly for boys and men," said Johanna Draper Carlson, the editor of comicsworthreading.com, a Web site for comic book news and reviews. "Then you end up with teen-girl superheroes who are drawn like Victoria’s Secret models."

"I don't think only women can write for women," Ms. Carlson added, "but I think it helps provide an alternative perspective and a more true-to-life experience." Ms. Carlson, who often champions female-friendly comics on her site, is taking a wait-and-see attitude to the Minx line.

The first Minx graphic novel will be "The P.L.A.I.N. Janes," written by Cecil Castellucci and illustrated by Jim Rugg. It tells the story of Jane, a transfer student in a suburban high school who starts a campaign, "People Loving Art in Neighborhoods." It's a call to appreciate the everyday world that comes to involve everything from protesting the construction of a new mall to encouraging pet adoptions from animal shelters.

Jane's classmates and fellow believers are Jane, who is interested in theater; Jayne, an academic whiz; and Polly Jane, a jock. Each is decidedly not part of the in-crowd. The reason for Jane's transfer is serious: her family fled to suburbia after Jane survived a terrorist attack that blew up a cafe in fictional Metro City.

The experience of survival is a personal one for Ms. Castellucci, 37, whose young-adult novels include "Boy Proof" and "The Queen of Cool." In 1979, when she was 9, Ms. Castellucci witnessed a bombing by the Irish Republican Army in Brussels. In 1986, she was in Paris during a rash of bombings. Those incidents, and the events of Sept. 11, played a role in shaping the story.

"It seemed like this was a good opportunity to explore those fearful feelings that I had growing up," she said in a telephone interview from her home in Los Angeles. "They've always been a part of my makeup and fears." Feeling scared, she said: is an emotion everyone understands. "You can't help it if you're a part of this world."

Ms. Castellucci was recruited by Shelly Bond, a Minx editor. It was an easy sell. "I love comic books," Ms. Castellucci said, listing several series she enjoys, including "Fables" and "American Virgin," on the DC imprint Vertigo, and a particular creator ("Brian K. Vaughan. I love everything he does").

But reading comics is different from creating one, particularly a 146-page graphic novel. "I had to learn how to write a story all over again," she said. "I did have a week or two when I thought I don’t know what I’m doing." She said that the graphic novel was "kind of like a movie or a storyboard, but it's not. There's so much you can do with the images and the pacing." She credited Mr. Rugg, the artist of "The P.L.A.I.N. Janes," as a prime source for advice.

Mr. Rugg, who is based outside Pittsburgh, said he appreciated the goal of Minx. "I liked their target demographic," he said. "I like the idea of doing comics for an atypical reader." In addition to creating the drawings, Mr. Rugg also gray-scaled them, giving the black-and-white comic book a sense of color. He finished his work last month.

One of Mr. Rugg's previous comics was "Street Angel," about a homeless teenage girl who fights crime, which he created with the writer Brian Maruca. Mr. Rugg, 29, called that comic, published by Slave Labor Graphics, his response to the typical depiction of women in mainstream comics, most particularly their impossibly proportioned bodies.

"It's the same for men," he acknowledged. "But I don't find that as offensive."

***
For more views on this, check out the article at Comics Worth Reading.

****
I live under a bridge.

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Anime Punk Joey's picture

Thank you manga fangirls of

Anime Punk Joey; Monday, November 27, 2006 - 14:14

Thank you manga fangirls of the world for showing these guys that girls need comics too. =)

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"The right to vote or equal civil rights may be good demands, but true emancipation begins neither at the polls nor in the courts. It begins in [the] soul." -Emma Goldman

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Rachel the Great's picture

I'm curious, though. All but

Rachel the Great; Monday, November 27, 2006 - 15:27

I'm curious, though. All but one of the creators lined up for the debut of the series are guys. The two editors are women, but a lot of the art and writing will come from men. Do you think this will have an impact when girls are faced with a decision between purchasing something overtly female like Dramacon and one of these new titles? As young female readers, will the male names on the covers of the book matter?

Oh, and more discussion of it was posted here:
http://www.mangablog.net/?p=759

Mixed sentiments all around, it seems.

****
I live under a bridge.

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Rachel the Great's picture

Creator and Title Lineup

Rachel the Great; Monday, November 27, 2006 - 16:15

I found a full account of the creators and their titles here:
http://comics212.net/2006_11_01_archive.shtml#116448462289284000

Clubbing, by Andi Watson and Josh Howard; Re-Gifters, by Mike Carey, Marc Hempel, and Sonny Liew; Good as Lily, by Derek Kirk Kim and Jesse Hamm; The P.L.A.I.N. Janes, by Cecil Castellucci and Jim Rugg

Cecil Castellucci is a woman who writes YA novels for girls. Jesse Hamm could be a girl or a boy, but from my googling, I'm thinking boy. So it looks like there is only one woman involved in the lineup. The two editors in charge are women, but they aren't the ones writing and drawing the books (at least not that I've heard, although that would be cool).

I am interested to read the books. Are you guys looking forward to them? Does it matter who wrote or drew them as far as gender and name recognition are concerned?

****
I live under a bridge.

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Hmm, well let me share what

David Doub; Monday, November 27, 2006 - 19:32

Hmm, well let me share what I know about the suspects.

Andi Watson has mainly done indy books, alot for Oni. I've read his book Geisha, about a girl who's an android trying to be human, and I'd say it was fairly good and I think girls may like it if they were exposed to it.

Josh Howard, while he draws in a sorta of anime style, his books seem mainly for guys. At least the people I've seen pick up Dead@18 and Black Harvest (written and drawn by Howard) were all men. Manga fans may seem him as another american imitator.

Mikey Carey, is a British writer, and so to fit that stereotype he's done books like Sandman spin offs and Hellblazer. He's currently writing X-Men. Based on his past work I'd say he may be good for older woman, but not young woman.

Marc Hempel has a fairly interesting and different art style, but I don't know if that's a plus or a minus for the intended audience. I've only seen his work in Sandman and I enjoyed it.

Just a guest, but they are all known in the comic book industry and I think that's why DC tapped them to work for the series.


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The following is an

David Doub; Monday, November 27, 2006 - 22:11

The following is an interview of DC Sr. VP Karen Berger about their new young girl line.

http://forum.newsarama.com/showthread.php?t=92334


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Anime Punk Joey's picture

I personally don't mind the

Anime Punk Joey; Monday, November 27, 2006 - 22:40

I personally don't mind the series being written by a male. I loved Ted Naifeh's Courtney Crumrin series well enough, after all. If the author/artist has a good grasp on his female characters and can make them believable as women, I see no problem.

Assigning males to the roles is a bit of a turn-off when looked at from our perspectives of course, the perspectives of women working towards a revolution in the male dominated industry; however, the average reader wouldn't think twice about it. To be honest, if I don't enojy what I'm reading, I don't even bother to remember (or even check) who wrote it.

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"The right to vote or equal civil rights may be good demands, but true emancipation begins neither at the polls nor in the courts. It begins in [the] soul." -Emma Goldman

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Re: I personally don't mind the

David Doub; Monday, November 27, 2006 - 23:45

Anime Punk Joey wrote:

Assigning males to the roles is a bit of a turn-off when looked at from our perspectives of course, the perspectives of women working towards a revolution in the male dominated industry; however, the average reader wouldn't think twice about it.

I could be viewed as a tad bit of disrespect from DC only view young women as only consumers and not as creators. Maybe they have future plans to draw on women creators once they've gotten the line started (and the YA author is a hint of that direction). I know it's hard for a editiorial department to field a lot of submissions and working with new talent, but honestly that work is the difference between trying to nuture a new audience/creators and just trying to cash in on the latest craze. I will admit Karen Berger has done good things with Vertigo, so there is promise.

Anime Punk Joey wrote:
To be honest, if I don't enojy what I'm reading, I don't even bother to remember (or even check) who wrote it.

I keep track of creators so if I don't like their style or something, I know to steer clear of their other works. No point in wasting time in re-learning that I don't like a writer.


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Anime Punk Joey's picture

David wrote:I know it's hard

Anime Punk Joey; Monday, November 27, 2006 - 23:55

David wrote:
I know it's hard for a editiorial department to field a lot of submissions and working with new talent, but honestly that work is the difference between trying to nuture a new audience/creators and just trying to cash in on the latest craze.

That's true; but this is still a step in the right direction, I believe.

David wrote:
I keep track of creators so if I don't like their style or something, I know to steer clear of their other works. No point in wasting time in re-learning that I don't like a writer.

I don't do that because I've found that my tastes don't exactly line up with particular styles. I might like one of many books by a certain author and utterly despise another by the same author. I don't like ruling anyone out. ;)

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"The right to vote or equal civil rights may be good demands, but true emancipation begins neither at the polls nor in the courts. It begins in [the] soul." -Emma Goldman

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Rachel the Great's picture

More from one of the creators

Rachel the Great; Tuesday, November 28, 2006 - 00:51

A user called sonnyliew (perhaps the Sonny Liew working on Minx?) posted this in my livejournal on the subject:
"The male/female thing is somewhat tricky - for my part, i know that those of us signing on knew that we were doing books meant for a manga-ish market; but I can't remember if a teenage female audience was specifically mentioned.

Drawing the book itself the only real concern was to make the storytelling work, gender never really came into it.

Still I suppose when the line is being marketed so specifically, you can't really escape gender issues - though,again, at the time of writing/drawing Re-gifters I don't think many of us were aware of what direction the marketing would take."

****
I live under a bridge.

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Well this is what Sr VP

David Doub; Tuesday, November 28, 2006 - 01:00

Well this is what Sr VP Karen Berger says about the books and how DC sees where they fit:

[From the outside, one might make the assumption that the books that will make up the Minx line came about – and perhaps the line itself did as well – as a collection of projects submitted to DC that were on the fringes of other imprints.

Nope, Berger said.

“These books really couldn’t fit anywhere else, to be honest. They really are geared for teenage girls, so it’s really not something that you would put out as a DCU book, because the majority of people who read DCU titles are not teenage girls. Likewise, it wouldn’t work in Wildstorm either. And while we do have a lot of women reading Vertigo, it skews older. Girls do tend to read up, but as an imprint, Vertigo is geared for readers that are older than teenage girls. And rounding out the list, CMX is import manga. So we really didn’t have a place for these books, and wanted to create a place that was directly for the American reader.

“Again, these are stories about real girls in the real world. There are no genre or fantasy aspects to it. We’re looking at this as an alternative to manga and as an alternative to young adult fiction.”]


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Anime Punk Joey's picture

Wow. Contra meets Diction.

Anime Punk Joey; Tuesday, November 28, 2006 - 01:10

Wow. Contra meets Diction. o.o

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"The right to vote or equal civil rights may be good demands, but true emancipation begins neither at the polls nor in the courts. It begins in [the] soul." -Emma Goldman

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Another source talking about Minx

David Doub; Tuesday, November 28, 2006 - 02:23

http://www.comicbookresources.com/columns/?column=13

And this is a interesting piece of information mentioned:

"And congrats to LITG-favourite, Andi Watson, whose pitched-in-2003 comic "Clubbing," a London-based mystery set in and around nightclubs, drawn by Josh ("Dead@17") Howard is to be published next year. Four years folks, that's the current length of the pipeline."


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Look Its Nichole's picture

This is interesting, to say

Look Its Nichole; Wednesday, November 29, 2006 - 02:57

This is interesting, to say the least.

In response to the qestions Rachel posed earlier:
I rarely pay attention to the gender of authors. I do tend to read a lot of books and comics by females, mainly because I prefer reading about female characters and female authors are more likely to write about female heroines.

The people should not be afraid of it's government. The government should be afraid of it's people. -V

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The official lineup

David Doub; Wednesday, November 29, 2006 - 03:43

2007 MINX TITLES:

* THE PLAIN JANES (May 2007)
The story of four girls named Jane who are anything but ordinary. Once they form a secret art gang, the girls take on Suburbia by painting the town P.L.A.I.N. - People Loving Art In Neighborhoods.

Cecil Castellucci
Cecil Castellucci grew up in New York City. In addition to being the author of two young adult novels, The Queen of Cool and Boy Proof, she is filmmaker, actress and a singer-songwriter. Currently, she lives in Los Angeles, in the "belly of the beast" known as Hollywood.

Jim Rugg
Jim Rugg is the artist and co-creator of Street Angel. He grew up in and currently lives near, Pittsburgh.

* RE-GIFTERS (June 2007)
A Korean-American California girl learns that in love and in gift-giving, what goes around comes around.

Mike Carey
Mike Carey is a comic writer, novelist and screenwriter who lives and works in London, England. He is best known for his work on Vertigo's LUCIFER and HELLBLAZER series. His novel, The Devil You Know, will be published by Warner Books in summer 2007.

Sonny Liew
Sonny Liew is an illustrator currently residing in Singapore. His works include Malinky Robot and MY FAITH IN FRANKIE, he has been part of the Flight and 24Seven anthologies.

Marc Hempel
Marc Hempel is best known for his collaboration with Neil Gaiman on THE SANDMAN: THE KINDLY ONES, as well as his own creations GREGORY, Tug & Buster, and Naked Brain.

* CLUBBING (July 2007)
A spoiled, rebellious London girl conquers the stuffy English countryside when she solves a murder mystery on the 19th hole of her grandparent's golf course.

Andi Watson
Andi Watson was born and bred in Leeds, England. He attended art school in Liverpool and spent his post-graduate years penniless in London. He has written several graphic novels including Samurai Jam, Skeleton Key, Geisha, Breakfast After Noon, Slow News Day and Love Fights.

Josh Howard
Josh Howard is the artist and writer of Dead @ 17 (Viper Comics), named by Wizard Magazine the #1 independent book to watch in 2005. Josh lives in Arlington, Texas with his wife and two children.

* GOOD AS LILY (August 2007)
What would you do if versions of yourself at ages 7, 29, and 70 suddenly became part of your already complicated high school life?
Derek Kirk Kim
Derek Kirk Kim has been writing and drawing comics all his life. His work includes Same Difference and Other Stories, as well as a story in FABLES: 1,001 NIGHTS OF SNOWFALL.

Jesse Hamm
Jesse Hamm's cartooning has appeared in various mini-comics, anthologies and on the web. GOOD AS LILY is his first mainstream project. Jesse lives near Portland, Oregon with his wife Anna, and her cat.

* CONFESSIONS OF A BLABBERMOUTH (September 2007) When Tasha's mom brings home a creepy boyfriend and his deadpan daughter, a dysfunctional family is headed for a complete mental meltdown, compliments of Tasha's blabbermouth blog.

Mike Carey
Mike Carey is a comics writer, novelist and screenwriter who lives and works in London, England. He is best known for his work on Vertigo's LUCIFER and HELLBLAZER series. His novel, The Devil You Know, will be published by Warner Books in summer 2007.

Louise Carey
Louise Carey's writing includes The Diary of a London Schoolgirl for the website of the London Metropolitan archive. She is a member of the Chicken Shed theatre company in London and has acted in their productions of Alice in Wonderland and Grimm Nights.

Aaron Alexovich
Aaron Alexovich was born in Chicago, Illinois, the year Elvis died. He currently sleeps the daylight hours away in Southern California. He contributed character designs to Nickelodeon's Invader Zim and Avatar: The Last Airbender. He is also the creator of Serenity Rose.

*WATER BABY (October 2007)
Surfer girl Brody just got her leg bitten off by a shark. What's worse? Her shark of an ex-boyfriend is back and when it comes to Brody's couch, he's not budging.

Ross Campbell
Ross Campbell currently lives in Rochester, New York. His published works include the Exalted RPG books, Spooked and Wet Moon, and The Abandoned.

*KIMMIE66 (November 2007)
This high-velocity, virtual reality ghost story follows a tech-savvy teenager on a dangerous quest to save her best friend, the world's first all-digital girl.

Aaron Alexovich
Aaron Alexovich was born in Chicago, Illinois, the year Elvis died. He currently sleeps the daylight hours away in Southern California. He contributed character designs to Nickelodeon's Invader Zim and Avatar: The Last Airbender. He is also the creator of Serenity Rose.


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Anime Punk Joey's picture

Water Baby and Kimmie66 seem

Anime Punk Joey; Wednesday, November 29, 2006 - 04:11

Water Baby and Kimmie66 seem like the best to me.

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"The right to vote or equal civil rights may be good demands, but true emancipation begins neither at the polls nor in the courts. It begins in [the] soul." -Emma Goldman

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Comic Writer Steve Grant

David Doub; Wednesday, November 29, 2006 - 20:53

Comic Writer Steve Grant weighs in on Minx:
http://www.comicbookresources.com/columns/?column=10

"A main objection to the Minx line was best summed up by Johanna Draper-Carlson - the lack of a sizable female presence on the creative end of the imprint (mastermind by Vertigo's Shelly Bond)- and there's something to that. Not that men can't write women, but we're back in the arena of unconscious bias and preconception, which makes it a matter of attitude and keeping some sort of perspective on the material. Warren Ellis suggests that's an overinflated concern, given that Shelly (the first female Shelly to work at the company, as far as I know, but there were at least two men with that first name) and Karen Berger can be expected to give the line a female perspective.

That's a dodgier proposition (which also implies strong editorial control and shaping of the material, something we may not want to see in a company, or rather division, that has traditionally promoted the individual voices of the talent, within Vertigo's parameters); women who last in editorial or creative capacities in comics for any length of time tend to either adopt the general attitudes of their male counterparts as a sort of natural camouflage, or they hold those viewpoints, basically, going in. Women who openly challenge the male perspective on what comics are supposed to be all about generally don't last a long time, not surprising considering that, as mentioned above, the comics market for the past couple decades has been the direct market, which has had little tolerance, except in fits and spurts, for anything that doesn't immediately feed its favorite jones.

But this is an argument that can't be settled until the material starts appearing. I've no idea yet what tack Berger & Bond will take, nor does anyone who hasn't been directly working with them on the books. On the surface, Minx (and the other lines Vertigo is concocting) is not only a good idea but a necessary one, and one that I suspect many other publishers, both comics and book publishers, will find themselves following as graphic novel saturation of bookstores continues. The main obstacle - and it has been something of an obstacle at Vertigo so far, as Minx and the other offshoots have been in the works for some time - is time, and the slowness at which material crawls through the bureaucracies of most publishing houses. You may recall Dark Horse's abortive superhero line, Comics' Greatest World/Dark Horse Heroes. It was conceived three or four years before it appeared, and the Dark Horse staff painstakingly developed it for that time. When it was conceived, the shared universe in comics was pretty much limited to Marvel and DC, and the New Universe was the only notable (if short-lived) offshoot; had it appeared within, oh, ten months of conception, Dark Horse's CGW likely would have gotten a lot more attention than it did, and whatever happened Dark Horse would at least have preserved their reputation for innovation. But development dragged on for years, and by the time the line surfaced, there was Image, and the Ultraverse, and any number of other superhero universes, and CGW was just another bit of flotsam adrift in the ocean, with Dark Horse being tagged as just another company trying to hop on the bandwagon.

Which is unfortunate, but the point is that in this business when you're invading a niche, you have two Darwinian choices: be first or be visibly better. Minx, whatever its eventual flaws may turn out to be, is at least first. "


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Rachel the Great's picture

Doub, you double quoted that

Rachel the Great; Wednesday, November 29, 2006 - 21:33

Doub, you double quoted that article!

Good perspective, but the author forgets: Minx ain't first. Scholastic's Graphix imprint was first, AND it got into stores via the YA distribution and marketing channels, no funny business with the comics industry politics involved.

In that case, Minx had better be good.

****
I live under a bridge.

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Actually Tokyopop has been

David Doub; Wednesday, November 29, 2006 - 22:35

Actually Tokyopop has been trying to get into the YA Girls market by using Disney properties. Via Tokyopop's Cine-Manga line, they are making books of such shows as Kim Possible, Lizzie McGuire, That's So Raven, and Bambi. Tokyopop does also have non-Disney stuff like, Nickelodeon and Cartoon Network stuff like All Grown Up, Avatar, My Little Pony, and Shrek 2.

http://www.tokyopop.com/manga.php?category_id=9

Problem with most Cine-Manga is that all it is is frames from the actual show used as panels for a comic. There's no real original content that way.

But on reading Mr. Grant's column I think why he's stating things in such a way is because he believes that Minx is a imprint of Vertigo (which Karen Berger has long been the head of) and Vertigo is a more mature comic line. This contradicts the press release from DC which states it's a YA line. So he may have just misread or was misinformed about the purpose of the line. But even with that, there are pre-existing attempts to get female readers like Dark Horse and Harlequin doing their romance graphic novels.

http://www.darkhorse.com/search/search.php?sstring=harlequin

And looking at all the examples we've mentioned so far, we've been talking about using the manga format and style to get to women, and I would dare say that a lot of the Minx line are less like manga and more like western comics. So maybe that is what will Minx stand out by not associating so closely with the manga boom and incurring the backlash that a lot of western "pretenders" get for attempting "manga".


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CECIL CASTELLUCCI Interview

David Doub; Wednesday, November 29, 2006 - 23:36

http://forum.newsarama.com/showthread.php?t=92711


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Interesting Facts on Minx

David Doub; Friday, December 1, 2006 - 19:53

From
http://pwbeat.publishersweekly.com/blog/2006/12/01/you-minx-you/#more-1238

"First, #1. Minx is a momentous undertaking by DC because they have set aside a quarter of a mil buckaroos to market a new line of graphic novels. $250,000 is small in the larger scheme, but far from chump change in the historically parsimonious comics field, and by teaming with Alloy Marketing, DC has proven they’re serious. No one has EVER done anything like this in mainstream comics before. Marvel doesn’t have two pennies to rub together towards outside marketing, and according to Paul Levitz this is their biggest outside marketing expenditure in 30 years.
It’s also something of a tacit admission that traditional comics marketing doesn’t reach the outside world in a targeted, modern way. In the real world, marketing isn’t sending out press releases, it’s partnering, pacting, blasting, placing and so on. To recap from the PW story on Minx, here’s some of Alloy’s plan for the line:

In May, DC will run a two-page advertorial in the Alloy-owned Delia’s mail-order clothing catalogue, which is shipped to roughly 900,000 young women. Alloy will also be sending out e-mail blasts about the series through its collection of Web sites (which include prom.com and delias.com) and, in September, distributing nearly 100,000 textbook covers featuring Minx titles to schools. "


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Anime Punk Joey's picture

At least they're taking this

Anime Punk Joey; Friday, December 1, 2006 - 21:27

At least they're taking this seriously.

David wrote:
In the real world, marketing isn’t sending out press releases, it’s partnering, pacting, blasting, placing and so on.

Would someone do a noob a favor and expound upon "partnering, pacting, blasting, and placing" for me?

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"The right to vote or equal civil rights may be good demands, but true emancipation begins neither at the polls nor in the courts. It begins in [the] soul." -Emma Goldman

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Rachel the Great's picture

I believe they are talking

Rachel the Great; Saturday, December 2, 2006 - 03:26

I believe they are talking about "blitz campaigning" or some such. That's where marketers sort of pool their talents, scratch each others' backs, sleep with each others' significant others. That sort of thing. DC will advertise through Delias, and Delias no doubt will get advertising through DC (or first dibs on premium advertising spots). "Blasting" is one of those annoying bits of jargon (not unlike my personally most hated "hooking up") which refers, I think, to opt-in spamming. Like, the other day I got my Cover Girl color newsletter, and the thing was armed to the teeth with a plug for a new YA novel. I'm not sure how effective such things are.

I could be talking out of my ass, of course.

They shouldn't overlook press releases, though. That is how your product gets on national television.

****
I live under a bridge.

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It shows that DC is actually

David Doub; Saturday, December 2, 2006 - 03:43

It shows that DC is actually trying to "market" this new line. Releasing a press release, then have the books just thrown into the direct market and the book stores isn't going to bode well for a new line. With so much manga, graphic novels, and general YA novels out there, you have to make a lot of noise to get noticed (regardless of how good the content is. Word of mouth is only good if people actually read it in the first place). Marketing says that you have to get a person to see a product multiple, multiple times before it starts to sink into their conscious memory. So a press release is one impression, seeing the actual book on the self is another. Not nearly enough to impressions to get a person interested in the product.

So what do you do? You work another in that field like Alloy (I honestly have no clue what Alloy actualy does) so that you both benefit from the repeated exposure. Of course money is a quick and easy way to facilitate such an arrangement (instead of say patiently waiting for Entertaiment Weekly or Time magazine to do a article on your Graphic Novel).


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Anime Punk Joey's picture

All I know about Alloy is

Anime Punk Joey; Saturday, December 2, 2006 - 17:50

All I know about Alloy is that they sell girls apparel through a mail-order system. They tend to cater to the preppish, semi-punk, semi-skater, pseudo-witty-shirt-wearing young ladies of America--the average girl basically. I'm not sure how popular they are, though.

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More links and comments about Minx

David Doub; Monday, December 4, 2006 - 22:15

http://pwbeat.publishersweekly.com/blog/2006/12/04/more-minx-links/


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