PICTURES TO FOLLOW SOON...
Okay, I've really neglected this blog
of late. But hey, that's what blogs are for, right?
I thought I'd do a quick review of
Botcon, just to bore the heck out of people with an opinion piece
which includes outdated news. Hey, that's what blogs are for, right?
Highlights of the Show
Queueing
It has to be said, that this was the
best I've seen the queues in the four years I've been attending
Botcon. My guys didn't think so, and as this was the first time in
attendance for my two travelling buddies – hereafter known as Nick
and Dick (or collectively if you'll indulge: The Icks) – they
complained about the queues a lot. Enough to make me wish they'd
come in 2009, that would have really given them something to complain
about. I never complained about the queueing, despite having MORE
GOD DAMN REASON TO than anyone (see: The Misery File; filed under
diarrhoea and losing a day in the hotel room).
Overall though, I
couldn't have picked a finer couple of mates to stand in a line and
dick about with for a few hours.
Buying Toys
Oh yeah, I got to buy loads of toys,
here's a quick picture of my haul, and we'll come back to it in a bit
when I start listing shit.
Meeting Peter Cullen
So this year, instead of insanely long
queues starting at 8 in the morning, this year FunPub implemented a
“lucky draw” system for meeting Peter Cullen, this meant he
didn't have to sign and shake quite as many hands, which must get
tiring over along weekend.
On the downside, the new draw to meet
Cullen was decided on the day, with EVERYONE who attended being
included in the draw. As several people rightly pointed out, this
should have been an online draw which you had to OPT IN for, that way
it would only include people who wanted to meet Peter Cullen (several
people already have met him after those insane queues I talked about
in previous years). The other advantage of doing the draw ahead of
time is you'd know in advance and could plan accordingly. I have
millions of items at home I would love to have signed by Peter
Cullen, from my original G1 toy to DVD sets to artwork and beyond.
Instead, I had a mad twenty minute rush
around the dealer room to find something to get signed that was cheap
and cheerful. You'd think FunPub would provide some nice glossy
prints of Peter Cullen for a meagre $5 or something, but no, because
that money is obviously better spent on a Soundwave headband.
Anyway, enough complaining, this was a
good problem. I ended up buying a sealed TFPrime RID Optimus Prime
to get signed (see picture, newb!), but this did unfortunately get a
little crushed on the way home. Having said that, I did somehow
manage to get seventy new toys home, as you'll see, some of them were
fairly big as well. Not bad for one suitcase.
Peter Cullen is a lovely chap, I tend
not to get star struck by famous peeps, but I'ms ure I babbled
incoherently a bit as I explained that I've wanted to meet him for
years but could never be bothered to stand in a line for four hours.
He seemed to take it as it was meant, rather than interpreting it as
some sort of sleight against him, so I thought it best that I didn't
ask him to dedicate the piece “to ebay.” Nice guy.
Buying Toys
So yeah, seventy toys. I'm not going
to list them all, as that would be boring, indulgent and strike me as
something from Bret Easton Ellis' “American Psycho” novel.
Having said that, what IS what blogs are for, right?
What I will do is talk about a few
pieces that are special to me, or stand out a bit.
My first purchases, within minutes of
entering the dealer room on the Friday preview, was a boxed set of
the Sonokong Goldran toys, from the Brave line.
I've recently gotten into Brave more
and more, and I will do an article dedicatd to them soon.
I asked to look at the figures and they
looked great, but being somewhat of a Brave novice, I wasn't 100%
sure what I was buying. Fortuitous moment of the day: I spy fellow
UK trans-fan, TFW mod and all around nice guy and Brave expert Sol
Fury about three feet away. Yoink! I collared him and he was great,
really taking the time out tomake sure I knew what I was buying. A
swift bit of haggling later and KA-CHING! I was $220 lighter.
Before I got to leave the stall, I
chatted with Sol Fury about Brave and remembered that, shit, I really
wanted a Shadow Maru. See picture that follows. Shadow Maru is a
repaint of the G1 awesome ninja Sixhot – who in my personal canon
doesn't enter into a Yaoui relationship with Spikes son, Daniel –
retooled with a new robot head, animal head and some great weapons.
They wanted a $100, but after I pointed out it's cheaper on their
website but the shipping has put me off, and c'mon mutha fuckers I
just spent $220 with you, I got it for $80. Cheers Toy Arena!
The two panels which are worth
attending
The Hasbro Panel, and the TFCC panel
are the two panels I consistently attend, because you need to see the
pictures. Every other panel you can read the shit online at your
convenience, and that's precious toy buying time going to waste.
The Hasbro panel was disappointing.
Sure, a couple of goodies and better than the awful 2011 reveals, but
compared to the awesome 2010 revelations...LAME!
C'mon Hasbro,
you know your audience, give us some new, original mold G1 characters
– preferably from 87-90 unless it's Trailbreaker – in the
Generations line. It's what we want, and every day you procrastinate
you lose an opportunity to the third parties.
It did seem to me from the feelin the
room that Hasbro have gone the wrong way releasing the Generation
2-esque day-glo version of Bruticus to stores, and the “real world”
colours as an SDCC exclusive, and Hasbro didn't really make it clear
that both were coming out. I think several people got the wrong end
of the stick thinking that the SDCC version would be the only
version, until they saw both figures on display in the Hasbro booth.
So overall, slightly disappointing.
Having said that, MP10 for under a hundred bucks...it seems rude not
to.
The TFCC panel was actually pretty
good, especially with the reveal of the TFCC subscription, similar in
style to the Matty Collector MOTU monthly nerd snail mail drop. The
highlight for me was the announcement of an actual official G1
Breakdown. A no-brainer really, as they have the mold and the head
available, and it beats CHMS at their own game. Sure, I buy and
support third parties, but I'm not a huge fan of how CHMS do things,
and would always rather have an official figure (unless it's shit,
CHUG Galvatron!).
Overall, I like the idea of a
subscription service, even though I'm no longer even a member of the
club (but I already have people in place to send these to in the US
to avoid getting raped monthly for shipping and customs charges).
This is what the fans have requested for years, and with obscure
characters and even the occasional Animated figure, I really am quite
a fan, but I hope that all the people that have pushed for this
realise that the majority of G1 figures we want will be sidelined as
exclusives and cost $45+, rather than trickling out slowly into
stores for $10-15.
I hope I'm wrong, but I think part of
the reason Hasbro agreed to this is to move them aside, to
concentrate on their main lines, which basically means any lines
which have mainstream appeal and a cartoon or movie backing them up.
Buying Toys
G1 toy wise I did great. I finished
off several sub-sets, such as Junior Headmasters, Junior
Targetmasters, Sparkabots, Clones and Monsterbots. Some were great
deals – Quickmix for $25 complete, others were a bit more than I'd
like to pay - $100 for a complete Hosehead, although I did haggle
down and trade a few pieces. I've spent sometime cleaning them up,
and with a few repro labels these will all pop.
All in all, it means I only need four
figures for 1987, and three figures for 1988 and I am done with what
I consider the main G1 collection, and then I can concentrate on
Pretenders (hate them), Micromasters (I never remember what I have
and what I need) and Action Master – whoI have strangely some
tolove given their awkwardness and oft-lamented place in G1 history
as a “line killer”. I made good bounds with Action Masters after
scorring a complete Jazz for $10 and thinking, “hmm, I wonder what
other Action Masters are here”. Fifteen Action Masters later, I am
close to completing the first years worth.
American Dogs! ... or Dallas City
Centre.
Dallas was awesome. It's not as great
a venue as Florida or California, which I will happily spend two
weeks in with all to see and do (that basically means theme parks,
comic shops and a drive to Vegas). Because of this, we opted for
only five days / four nights in Dallas. With a 12 hour flight each
way, that was a crazy schedule to keep.
Overall, I feel I saw and did
everything I wanted to in Dallas, and the enthusiasm of one of my
travelling buddies meant that everything we saw and did was an
experience, whether it was taking photos of fire hydrants, traffic
lights or spotting different coloured taxi-cabs.
Exclusive Toys
The Club Store was an epic
mini-adventure all in itself. I was the only one in my little group
who wasn't hit by the TFCC credit card fraud problems this year,
mainly because I moved about so much last year by addresses are no
longer valid, and because I thankfully didn't renew my membership
this year. Both my friends who I travelled with were stung. Twice
in one case.
Freshly armed with new credit cards, I
asked my buddy if he had told his credit card companies he was going
on holiday. He said no, but it shouldn't be a problem as he used to
travel abroad fairly frequently. The problem was, he had been stung
by FunPub twice, naming them as the potential security breach when it
happened, so when his card had a sudden flurry of activity in Dallas,
and then was used to try and authorise a sale with FunPub, warning
lights went off and they blocked his card. A massive pain in the
arse when your four thousand miles from home with no money.
Thankfully, my debit card was going
through a rare period of actually showing money in the account, so we
managed to get all the toys we wanted.
It just goes to show though how the
credit card fraud thing goes on to have long lasting ramifications
long afterwards, lets hope TFCC sort that shit out!
Much has been written about these, and
I don't want to go into too much detail. Suffice to say, I thought
this was one of the weakest sets of exclusives they've had.
Generally, I feel 2009 and the “Wings of Honour” set was the
lamest duck of them all, but because of the novelty of that being my
first Botcon I feel I need to keep the toys and boxset.
Being a 99%er – that is I'm nearly
completest, but if I really dislike something or feel it has no place
in my collection I leave it, things like Armada Scavenger or CHUG
Galvatron. I thank the movie line for breaking my will and any
miss-held belief that being a completest was a clever idea – I had
recently parted with my Shattered Glass 2008 box set.
Shattered
Glass is an excellent way for people to expand their collection, to
buy an necessary second version of every figure or repurpose an
obscure repaint into a new line. However, I have my G2 redux
collection for that, and much prefer the crazy colour schemes one can
get away with on G2 figures. Either way, both are great for customs,
but I went for G2 and don't need a third set of everything with
wrongly coloured faction labels, I'm much happier with obscure
faction logos.
I kept the box set, as it was a Botcon
I attended, and I have repurposed the awesome red Tracks as Road-Rage
for my Classics collection along with Kick-Off, and Treadshot as an
evil Decepticon. As it stand I still have Overlord, Metalhawk and
Octopunch (pending a new head for the latter), but I may well sell
all of these off and leave myself with just two figures in the box
set. I have kept the Spinister even though I feel they got the
colours the wrong way around, but that if the way the figure is
molded and the transformation is so different to the original, having
one mode in inaccurate colours was inevitable. I have also kept six
of the SG Junkions, currently I am displaying them with my normal
Junkions, without a hint of a continuity retcon as to who they are or
why they are there. They are black and purple and look cool, that is
enough for me.
So that means I sold off a few figures.
Ultra Magnus and SG Prime had to go, I hate the mold, it is of no
use to me and I am happier with my four versions of the G2 Laser
Prime mold. The stoopid Bard of Darkmount, yellow Straxus was also
no good to me and I traded that in fairly quickly for extra spening
money. The way I look at trading the exclusives is, sure, I might
get more for them if I sold them in the UK at Auto Assembly, but less
money is worth more to me at Botcon where I can buy all sorts of
obscure goodies.
That leaves just Soundwave unaccounted
for, and my epic tale of trade in fail!
Despite the fuss surrounding the
character, I thought that was the weakest of the set. I don't like
the mold, I don't like Shattered Glass, I don't like Soundwave in
white...and I REALLY don't like obscure GI Joe references. If I
wanted a cold slither I'd give myself a reptile enema. He HAD to go.
First day I traded him for like $65,
that went towards my G1 Doublecross. I was happy.
Then I saw a dealer offering, get this,
$80 cash for Soundwave and $40 for the $5 headband. I know, right!
I told my friends Will and Rich, and
ran off to the dealer I sold him to earlier with a tale of woe and
regret and I wish I'd kept the figure really, honest guv. He very
nicely agreed for me to buy the figure back from him for $65, as I've
bought from him in the past. Nice one!
I run back around to the cash offering
fool / dealer, bumping into Will on the way. Will has traded several
figures in after my hot tip and made great money, Rich is in the
process of trading with the dude as I get there.
What does the guy say to me?
“Sorry, too many, no more!”
Thanks to my amazing nice guy attitude
helping my friends out, I'm now $65 and back in the possession of
fucking Soundwave...
To be continued.
Wal * Mart (to buy toys)
No trip to the US is complete without
midnight visits to Wal*Mart. I love Walmart, I really do, and when
you're surrounded by hotel prices and hotel bars, it is very wise to
stock up on snacks, water and soda...even if the soda didn't agree
with me.
Frutiful visits – thanks to Will
having a car – scored me some new t-shirts and an RID Prime
Ratchet. Yay. It's fun to buy at least one toy from retail.
More toys...
No good deed goes unpunished. Stuck
with my Soundwave (and headband!!! Great), I don't manage to offload
him until Sunday morning, after resigning myself to the fact I was
probably going home with him.
I managed to swap him with an awesome
dealer guy for White Berserker SixWing, six Micromaster figures which
merge into one figure, the last of the Micromaster combiner re-issues
I need to complete my set. One which was currently selling on ebay
in my watch list, for $180! Win! I can't complain with that.
Kennedy!!!
Another awesome aside to Transformers
was the full Kennedy experience. I'm a big fan of American politics
from '45- '72, and it was great to see such an integral slice of
history. For every Bill Hicks myth it dismissed it raised four more
questions, and my knowledge of both Jack and Bobby's assassinations
is now pretty insane since returning home and reading up / watching
all the films about it. Yep, I too stood on the grassy knoll, and
marvelled and people willing to risk death for that all important
photograph stoof on the exact spot he was shot, helpfully marked with
an “X” in the road. Classy Dallas, classy. Given how much
Dallas hated Kennedy prior to that fateful November afternoon, no-one
can argue he hasn't been damn good to the economy.
Parts Parties (to buy toys)
I love the parts parties at Botcon, and
this was my first chance to really indulge in them, as this was the
first year I stayed in the actual convention hotel. For 2 weeks, I
couldn't justify the expense, but for four nights, split three ways,
it was worth the money.
Megamus and Megatoyfan stole the
parties again, hopefully with less asshole thieves than last year,
and I got some great bargains. There was a chap four doors down from
our room which had a nice little set-up, and I got quite close to
buying the super exclusive DIY custom-class Shockwave / Longarm Prime
off him for $200. I didn't really want it, but knew I could flip it
for a profit. He ended up selling it for $500, and more power to
him. Even though I booked within four minutes of ticket sales
opening, I still missed the customs bookings. Next year...
Outside of the regular TF affair was
the proliferation and reveals of the third party companies, this year
safely removed from the Hasbro eagle eyes on the dealer room floor.
Mostly...
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Joe photobombing a previous years and this years entry. |
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Custom Competition
I'm gonna save this for a separate
entry and showcase a few of my customs over the years as well, as
I've already waxed on enough. Mind you, that's what blogs are for,
etc...
More toys, third party edition.
On display at the parts partys was the
awesome finished version of Cyclops, and a very close to finished
version of Air Screecher, Hands of Steel versions of Shockwave and
Starscream, courtesy of MMC and Captured Preys hotel room. These are
awesome, and there is a good chance I won't be able to resist all
three seekers upon release. I am lucky enough to have fiddled with a
test shot version of Cyclops, all in all, this could be the best
release of the year.
Also were on show were the awesome
Venksta's Hubcap and Bumper add-on kits. I am a big fan of his work
and he is a lovely, affable chap with some nice things to say about
my custom work, bless him. If you don't have his add-ons for
Darkwing and Skyfall, then shame on you. Annoyingly he had Goldbug
heads, but as mine were in the post at the time, I had to learn
patience...young padawan.
Other third party wins included chrome
Drift swords for $10, Devils Horn add-on kit for Cliffjumper for $20
and some more add-on kits from Maiden Japan. I am a sucker for his
junkion add-ons.
There were more third party goodies
discussed and seen at the show, but several of these weren't for
public consumption...yet.
Guests
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That guy! |
The guests always kind of go under my
radar, as I tend to avoid panels and long autograph queues. It was
nice to meet David Wallis of Shortpacked infamy, always good chatting
with Garry Chalk and the fact he is a fellow smoker (occasional in my
case) really helped, I offered to save Simon Furman from an
over-zealous fan which I will mock him about in the future (I think
they were arguing continuity errors from comics he wrote 25 years
ago), caught up briefly with the always busy David Kaye, was reminded
by Derrick Wyatt that I have to finish a custom for him (kind of
humbling that) and got a chance to talk bad sci-fi with the brains
behind the Animated Almanacs again. Can't be bad.
Even more toys...
Some of the best parts of the toy
shopping were swapping parts with people and haggling. Although the
problem with taking a parts box with me was - not only did it chew up
suitcase on the way back – I broke any number of international laws
by taking a G1 Megatron IN GUN MODE in my suitcase. Completely my
accident. It didn't even register to me as a thing, it's just a
junker to me. Oops. I got away with it, which was great, but gave
it away rather than attempting to “smuggle” it back. Dumb ass!
I had almost as much fun buying stuff
with my guys though, picked up all four G1.5 Axxelarators for Rich,
who managed to come back with nearly as many toys as me but did much
better on deals than I did. $20 for an Animated Fisitron!!!
The best “win” of the event..
Okay, it may not have been the best
figure I bought back with me, but man, how psyched was I when I
(finally) got to the Club Store and they had a few Runamucks in stock
for $25?!? I refused to rejoin this year, as I have paid $79 every
year (shipping is the killer) for the last six years only to see the
toys for sale much, much cheaper on the secondary market. Instead, I
joined a group order for Runabout (to spread the horrendous cost of
shipping and customs, last year I paid close to £200 for
Cheetor and G2 Ramjet, only to see them cheaper at Botcon...and I
hadn't even received mine yet) and trusted that somehow, somewhere,
I'd find Runamuck. $25? I bought two.
Yeah, I'd happily pay £800 for a
holiday to save $54 on a toy. What of it?
Save the best 'till last: The people.
This is always bittersweet.
I love America, and Americanna. I
collect American toys, I spent twelve years working in a comic shop
that sold US comics...I drive a freakin' Pontiac Firebird (with UK
petrol prices!). I love America, and I struggle coming home, and
it's only been made harder by the amount of great friends I have made
in the US. I console myself with the fact that Botcon is only a
break from reality, and living in the US wouldn't be a non-stop Mecca
of toys and geekdom, that real issues like guns, and employment, and
that fucking abortion issue would keep cropping up.
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Ill and bloated...or fat? You decide. |
From photobombing with Joe (present)
and Joe (absent), selling customs to Will, to fucking about in the
hotel pool with Colin, smoking with Chell, getting that one missing
Decoy for my collection from Christian, sending a UK exclusive GI Joe
convention poster to Kevin (also absent, lazy West coasters!), riding
in elevators with the Icks to see the OCP building from Robocop, from
meeting new random people who find our awkward brand of sarcastic
British humour appealing, being given TF Prime toys that I'd
completely forgotten I paid for months ago whilst queueing...
...I miss the guys there. I go for the
toys, I stay for the people.
Still, there is always Auto Assembly :)