Showing posts with label sdcc. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sdcc. Show all posts

Sunday, July 27, 2014

Recap: NerdHQ A Conversation with Badass Women Mystery Guests!

Zachary Levi’s NerdHQ panels are usually pretty big highlights of SDCC. They’re streamed live online, allowing many more fans to tune in and watch for themselves, rather than rely on the tweets and blurry photos of the panels in Hall H or Ballroom 20. This year proved to set the new standard for SDCC’s going forward with the panel, “A Conversation with Badass Women Mystery Guests!”

Who were these mystery guests? Yvonne Strahovski (Chuck, 24), Retta (Parks and Recreation), Missy Peregrym (Rookie Blue, Heroes), Jennifer Morrison (Once Upon a Time, House), Ming-Na Wen (Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D, ER), and Sophie Turner (Game of Thrones).

So yeah, it was a pretty freaking kick-ass panel. I tuned in 20 minutes late (as I was foolishly, furiously, reading the Marvel live blogs, learning nothing as I was missing this) but I watched the last 40 minutes of it live then went back and watched the beginning. That’s the beauty of YouTube live-streams, they’re automatically ready for playback the moment they end. I’ve embedded it below, it really is worth a watch.

They talked about the tropes they don’t like (for Yvonne, it’s the gratuitous shots of women in their underwear when the scene gains nothing from it), to women who inspire them. Across the board, they said their mom, or someone in their family.

Jennifer Morrison also mentioned How I Met Your Mother director and executive producer, Pam Fryman. For fans of the show, you’ll remember Jennifer Morrison’s guest role during season 6 as Zoey Pierson, Ted’s nemesis and eventual girlfriend, for twelve episodes. 

I think it really speaks to Pam as a leader and strong female in this industry that she was so influential on Morrison. At that point, she had already been on House and went right into Once Upon a Time after her HIMYM appearances, but she saw something in Pam she didn't see while working on other productions (that she mentioned whilst on the panel.)

All of these women were so well-spoken about the industry and the world that they have grown up in (even Sophie Turner, who is only 17!) I think there is finally - sadly finally - a shift in the industry where women are seen as equals to men. They're no longer sex symbols or housewives. They're fleshed out, real human beings who mirror real-world women. Imagine that! 

However, I did read on Tumblr that all these shows these women are currently on, are run by men. Despite the fact that Joss Whedon, Mike Schur, Eddy Kitsis and Adam Horowitz etc. can write strong three-dimensional female characters, there is still such a boys club when it comes to the behind-the-scenes worlds in film and television.

In 2013, according to the 16th annual Celluloid Ceiling report, as reported by The Hollywood Reporter, only 10% of Hollywood writers in 2013 were women. Maybe that percentage is a little better in television (where I'd like to be) but that statistic is still abysmal. 

Thankfully, there are women like Mindy Kaling, Tina Fey, Linda Yaccarino, and Shonda Rhimes who are fantastic at what they do, whether its writing, producing, acting, leading, advertising or managing. These are the women I look up to as I aspire to work in this industry (or adjacent to it - I’ve got many women I admire at Vulture, BuzzFeed, the A.V. Club and the like).

There is a point to all of this somewhere. Maybe it’s just that I am so thrilled to see more attention rightly being called to these badass women in the industry and I hope to see this panel again next year (maybe I’ll be in the audience?!)

Thursday, July 24, 2014

FOMO, SDCC and You

Working for an online entertainment website is wonderful. I get to talk about television with people who are cut from the same cloth, make friends from all of the world, and my pop culture knowledge is off the charts. It's especially nice at Hypable because we're given a lot of creative freedom to write what we like. We are a site that is "for fans, by fans," after all, so anything that we are passionate about, we're encouraged to write about.

But...

All that being said, there is also one major downfall to being in this entertainment world: San Diego Comic-Con. Specifically, my lack of attendance at the convention.

(Photo credit: Andrew Sims)
At this point, there's something for everyone at Comic-Con. Yes, at its core, there are still panels and sections of the vendor hall dedicated to comic books, video games and everything that comes with those universes, but there are television shows like The Blacklist and Once Upon a Time and television/online hybrid Community. There are panels for movies such as the Marvel franchise and Disney ventures. The glitz and glamour of fancy Hollywood parties have creeped into SDCC's evening plans over the years (disclaimer: I have no idea if this is a new thing or not. Has social media simply made the partying more evident?)

Zachary Levi, one of my favorite actors in recent memory, sits at the helm of Nerd Machine's Nerd HQ where there are daily "Conversations" with various celebrities. This year's schedule has Jensen Ackles And Jared Padalecki, Felicia Day, Joss Whedon and Yvonne Strahovski. Thankfully, these are sometimes live-streamed. If not, you can definitely find write-ups of them online the next day.

Suffice to say, pretty much a solid 70% of the pop culture I love has a presence at SDCC. Therefore (ergo?) it's a safe bet that many other people on the Hypable staff like it too. There are probably about 10 people representing the site in San Diego right now. As press, they're granted access to certain interviews and red carpet events, and as convention goers, they'll attend panels that I'd kill to attend (such as the aforementioned Once Upon A Time).

So naturally, I am jealous. As enviously green as the wicked witch. The FOMO has morphed into a I-Know-I'm-Missing-Out feeling, and I just have to accept that. Thankfully, I am not the only one on the Hypable staff who couldn't attend and are suffering from behind their computer screens like I am. Misery loves company, so we have bonded together online in the wake of our friends bonding IRL at speakeasy bars and hotel rooms.

This is the third year I've actively wanted to attend SDCC so it's no surprise that it didn't work out. Real-life work always gets in the way and unless I'm unemployed next year (or score an awesome job that actually allows me to go representing them in some capacity), I don't think that'll change any time soon.

In the meantime, I leave you with a recommendation to read an amazing article about how to cope with not being at SDCC by my friend Danielle and the image I was tagged in on Facebook this morning: