WIL WHEATON dot NET

50,000 Monkeys at 50,000 Typewriters Can't Be Wrong

part three of my interview with comicmix

  • Books
  • WWdN in Exile

The final part of my three part interview with Comicmix is online.

COMICMIX: Okay, Wil, as a writer and reader of comics, what makes a good story to you?

WIL WHEATON: Comics are a visual medium, so the artwork is extremely important to me. There are tremendously talented writers who occasionally get paired up with artists whose art I don’t like. And I won’t read those books.

There are artists and writers who collaborate together. Matt [Fraction] gives Casanova artist Gabriel Ba as much credit for Casanova being awesome as people give Matt for making Casanova awesome. Ed [Brubaker] does the same thing with Criminal. And I think that says a lot about the importance of a good team-up. I’m lucky.

I’ve gotten to work with some great artists when I’ve done manga for TokyoPop.I don’t know if the stories I’ve written would have the same emotional impact with the reader with different art. That really, really important combination of peanut butter and chocolate is really important to making comic books great.

Um. Wil? How about you answer the goddamn question?

What makes a book — just a standard book — very good, is the story and the dialogue and the interaction of the characters. So what makes a comic book great is those ingredients all put together, matched up with good pacing and really good artwork. A lot of the Alan Moore comics have all these wonderful elements that make reading comics fun, too. Top Ten is like playing “Where’s Waldo,” because after you’ve read the story you can go back through and read it again. Or if you read Watchmen and see the issues, there’s the Rorschach issue that’s in the middle where it mirrors itself — that kind of stuff. A book like Sin City that uses positive and negative space really creatively, that’s a great book, too.

Of course, I should disclaim all this stuff. I recently wrote that I was worried about the new Star Trek movie being good, and I was vilified by Star Trek fans for having the temerity for expressing an opinion about this. Like I don’t deserve to have an opinion about this.

This is the end of about 2 hours of me and Chris talking, and this final part feels rambling to me, which is probably how I felt when we’d talked for about 2 hours. I got to talk about technology a little bit, though, which was kind of cool:

CMix: What about the one piece of technology you can’t live without?

WW: The technology I can’t live without? Does encryption count as technology? It would have to be encryption. Think about the Internet without encryption. Absolutely no shopping online at all. None. Ever.

Not a single financial transaction would be possible without encryption.

Sure, there are things that I like that are fun. But can’t live without? I could not live without encryption — and to make it clear, I’m talking about open source public encryption. R.S.A. standards.

Yay standards! Yay for stating the obvious! Yay for Neil Gaiman writing Batman next year!

Oh, my favorite part of the interview is when I go on and on about my creative process. It’s really too long to excerpt, but I promise it’s worth the effort to go read the whole interview at Comicmix.

See what I did there?

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28 July, 2008 Wil

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I can tell by watching this that he used to be cool. → ← green grass and high tides forever (and ever and ever and ever and

7 thoughts on “part three of my interview with comicmix”

  1. angie k says:
    28 July, 2008 at 5:16 pm

    I completely agree with you about the future of the internet. It kind of scares me. This isn’t the same internet it was years ago. I’m all for change but you have to understand where it all came from.
    Also, sorry for sending you email without a digital signature. I guess I’m one of the schmucks who still doesn’t understand how to use it. I hope you won’t think less of me. đŸ˜‰
    Nice interview!

  2. Jules says:
    28 July, 2008 at 5:16 pm

    I love how you interview. Always makes for entertaining viewing and reading. It would make my millennium if you agreed to do an interview with me for my radio station

  3. Anna Harriman says:
    28 July, 2008 at 5:25 pm

    I see what you did there. Well played, sir, well played.
    Great interview! My roommates and I were very entertained!

  4. ExGeekDogTrainer says:
    29 July, 2008 at 3:38 am

    Part 1:

    …I have a flow chart for when I go to see movies, and one of the first things on the flow chart is, “Is Tom Cruise in this movie?” Yes? Fail.

    Thank you for causing Honey Nut Cheeriosâ„¢ to shoot out my nose at 3:25 in the morning. If it’s not the phraseology, it’s the imagery. You da man!
    Must clean laptop now…

  5. Root says:
    29 July, 2008 at 11:19 pm

    “it’s going to be really important that there are still old-line guardians training up-and-comers to appreciate what it’s like.
    I’m writing a column about that right now.”
    Where exactly can we find this article…I feel like it’ll be nearly as important and interesting as your PAX keynote.
    ————————
    “There’s nothing wrong with taking a shit but you wouldn’t want to do it in a glass box in the middle of Times Square.”
    -I had a dog that died about a year ago, she was probably the smartest dog I ever knew. Whenever I’d let her out to do her business if she caught me looking in her direction while taking a shit, she’d get up and find someplace where I wouldn’t be able to look. This quote reminded me of that.

  6. Dreadwind says:
    31 July, 2008 at 8:30 pm

    Great interview, but then, you’ve already heard that ;). I had a bit of a geekgasm when I heard that Gaiman’s going to be writing for Batsy, too.

  7. chris says:
    4 August, 2008 at 4:24 pm

    Hey Wil,
    I also see what you did there and I thank you greatly for it. And thanks also for hanging out for those 2 hours. I wasn’t bored for a second.

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