Nosh pastrami with Glenn Hauman as we discuss how he shook things up during the earliest days of electronic publishing, the embarrassing high school newspaper writings of Ted Chiang, the way the assembly-line nature of comics keeps many creatives from seeing the big picture, why he's nobody's first choice for anything but everybody's second choice for everything, his pre-teen encounters with another pre-teen fan who eventually became a Marvel Comics Executive Editor, the philosophical question he asked actor Michael O'Hare just before Babylon 5 began to air, the lunch that led to his first published short story being about the X-Men, what visiting Don Heck's house at age 12 taught him about artists and taking an art class from John Buscema at age 13 taught him about himself, the plot of the Warren Worthington novel he never got a chance to write, the free speech lawsuit which had him going head to head with the Dr. Seuss estate, plus much more.
Episode 188: Al Milgrom
Episode 187: Randee Dawn
Episode 186: Tim Waggoner
Episode 185: Oghenechovwe Donald Ekpeki
Episode 184: Michael Swanwick
Episode 183: Eileen Gunn
Episode 182: Carol Tilley
Episode 181: Wesley Chu
Episode 180: Max Gladstone
Episode 179: David Ebenbach
Episode 178: Michael Jan Friedman
Episode 177: Boys, Beasts & Sam J. Miller
Episode 176: Patrick O'Leary
Episode 175: David Gerrold
Episode 174: Gwendolyn Clare
Episode 173: Wen Spencer
Episode 172: Steven R. Southard
Episode 171: John Appel
Episode 170: Alex Segura
Episode 169: Paul Kupperberg
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