Olympic celebs, midnight dips and Comic-Con: photos of the weekend
The Guardian’s picture editors select photographs from around the world Continue reading… Source link
The Guardian’s picture editors select photographs from around the world Continue reading… Source link
What often gets lost in the hoopla around Comic-Con is that it’s run by a nonprofit. It’s important to organizers that the event do well so that, frankly, they can do more events, but it doesn’t need to make money, and as long as fans are pleased—whether by Hall H panels or just picking up a Todd McFarlane autograph—the show is a success. Comic-Con International, the organization behind Comic-Con, went into 2020 with roughly $25 million in reserves, and that money got them through the lean years. Perhaps even less than the studios, the organization could use a hit, Salkowitz notes, but it may not need it. Going into this year, organizers were “looking forward to having a normal year—normal being relative, of course,” says David Glanzer, Comic-Con’s chief communications and strategy officer. I’d asked him whether organizers were looking to make a bigger splash this year to recover from a couple of wobbly years at the start of the decade—a notion he pushed back on. The event features some 2,000 hours of programming, he …
Beneath Darwin’s singlets and thongs are hearts beating for all things geek. On Saturday, an extreme heatwave did not stop Territorians from pulling on their wigs, spandex and face paint to cosplay for Tropicon. Only in its second year, the one-day celebration of geek culture – board games, esports, cosplay, comics and fantasy books – drew a crowd of more than 1,300 to Darwin’s Entertainment Centre, a huge turnout in a city of about 140,000. Brooke Wayne as Wednesday Addams. Photograph: (A)manda Parkinson/The Guardian Mad Snake cafe owner and Darwin city local councillor, Sam Weston, helped organise the event. “Two years ago, I thought Darwin deserved a bit of a nerd-type event and I called all the heads of all the different nerd groups into my cafe,” he said. “The geek culture is just getting so massive now. It’s not just those playing Dungeons and Dragons. It’s people like me that collect Star Wars … it is a whole range of ages, genders, races and cultures that are often overlooked.” Sam Santos as Sailor Moon’s …