Arrived at the Convention Center around 9:00 AM, and before entering powered up my camera and was astonished to see it displaying a message to the effect of "Can not record". Powered off, opened the door for the storage card, and yep, it was not there. After my head exploded from that shock, I realized what had happened. The evening before I had decided to copy to my computer photos I had taken of the Con up to then, in order to use them as memory aids while I typed up preliminary blog entries. So, after I had done that copying and removed the card reader from the computer, I had simply kept the card in the reader.
I did some thinking about where near the Convention Center I could purchase a new card. I walked the four or so blocks to the Longs Drug Store at Horton Plaza, and obtained there a 1-GB card for less than $20. Not bad.
First panel I went to Sunday was another one for DC Comics -- DC Nation: One Weekend Later. My interest here being the promise of a major announcement. Dan DiDio was again the moderator, but this panel was mostly composed of DC editors and managers. The hour was composed of reviewing the DC panel's that had occurred earlier and a questions-and-answers session. The big announcement? That Neil Gaiman is writing a Batman story. Sweet.
Also went to an annual Comic-Con Sunday event: Starship Smackdown. Like the annual events I wrote about in the post for Comic-Con third day, I've also never been to this before, so no clue from the description in the program exactly what might occur. This deals with what is the best starship, so I had thought that perhaps there would be computer generated videos of famous starships battling each other.
Not so much. What this turned out to be was the nearest thing to anarchy I saw the entire Con! Firstly, a list of 10 well-known starships was written down on a white board. Six more starships were needed on the list, which was thrown to the audience, and that's when things started getting wild. Names of other starships being shouted out, the moderator and panel accepting or rejecting (for all kinds of reasons) them, boos and cheers from the audience for the decisions.
The moderator and panel then began discussing which of each pair of starships (as written down on the whiteboard) would be the survivor in a battle, all to more shouting, booing, and cheering from the audience.
After the first round dropped half of the starships, the moderator introduced a random element to add to the remaining starships: a captain for each one. Names of 20 captains had been written on slips of paper and were pulled out of a hat one the panelists had worn. Included in the first seven captains selected were: Captain Merrill Stubing of "The Love Boat", and the Captain and Tennille. The audience loved those. For the final captain, the moderator read out the names of all remaining captains and asked the audience to select which one to use by cheering. And the selection was: Cap'n Crunch! Good times, good times.
Now, for the first time ever, the Smackdown had another panel running immediately after it, so the moderator was for the first time did not have the luxury of allowing discussion and voting on which starship survives each battle to run long, and had to press the panel to finish in the allotted time.
The final decision on victorious starship was: the Star Wars Imperial Star Destroyer, as captained by James T. Kirk!
Here are my fourth day photos.
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