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 128: Danny Fingeroth
Episode 127: Irene Vartanoff
Episode 126: Farah Mendlesohn
Episode 125: Stephen Dedman
Episode 124: Lee Murray
Episode 123: Sequestering with Scott Edelman
Episode 122: Justina Ireland
Episode 121: Social Distancing with Scott Edelman
Episode 120: A Sarah Pinsker for a New Day
Episode 119: Sheltering in Place with Scott Edelman
Episode 118: 1995 Science Forum: How Old is the Universe?
Episode 117: Michael Dirda
Episode 116: Keith R.A. DeCandido
Episode 115: John Edward Lawson
Episode 114: Alexandra Erin
Episode 113: L. Penelope
Episode 112: Bob Proehl
Episode 111: Elsa Sjunneson-Henry
Episode 110: Larry Lieber
Episode 109: Paul Kirchner
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