About Geek Circus

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Ontario, Canada
Our blog Geek Circus; Samantha & Dylan: Mother and Son team that mesh together their love/obsessions of Gaming, Comics,TV Series, Movies, Books, Collecting, Observations, Photos, T-shirts & Cats. Ramblings. Dylan: Artist,"Passionate" Gamer, Toy Collector, Storyteller, Aspiring Video/Photographer, 16 Dragonborn Paladin, Fanboy; Gamer videos. Samantha: Women geek out too! Journalistic tendencies. My writing has been geared towards Geek Culture, interests from my childhood influenced by 60s,70s,80s. What I enjoy the most about geek culture is meeting interesting people, and telling their stories. X-Files!!!!

Sunday 15 June 2014

T-Shirt feature; Getting Shirty

I could not resist doing a feature on Getting Shirty after checking out their website of awesome nerdy goodness of tees! Then, I found Hannibal slogan t-shirts. I fell in love.



                                                        
Hannibal - TV Series
                                                          

Getting Shirty has been making custom t-shirts since 2006. They do Television, Film, Music fandom inspired tees, pop culture and even some pretty cheeky t-shirts too. There really is something for everyone's taste. Getting Shirty even lets you create your own t-shirts as well.

Below are a couple of my favorites. I'm pretty sure you will find your nerd-tastic favorites too!


                                        

Soooooooo what are you waiting for??? Are you Getting Shirty yet? Website: www.gettingshirty.com

You can also follow Getting Shirty on Facebook  Twitter and Tumblr












                                                       
                                                                      
                                                               
                                                                              
 


















 

Monday 9 June 2014

Convention Harassment Continued..

For those of you who know me (or have read the blog) than you know as a Geek Girl how passionate I am about geek/fan girl hate and harassment in geek culture and conventions.

As a group of people who have been outcast from normal society,  who have an understanding of our love and commitment to franchises such as Star Wars, for example or how certain toys and collectibles induce childhood nostalgia, we should be embracing our individual passions! Sharing with other like minded people and be totally excited to expect positive connections and other fan encounters while attending a convention. ANYWHERE.

We need to have a dialogue where everyone addresses these VERY serious issues of hate, misogyny, harassment (whether verbal or physical). An environment where every one feels safe and leaves a convention with a positive experience.

I have other very strong views about the way society seems to be going with regards to women, which I will save for another day. Right now I really want to share with you a blog by Caliban, author at Fanboy News Network. He has worked for Wizards of the Coast and been involved within other aspects of Geek Culture for many years. He has been blogging about the Fangirl hatred and has some insight and fantastic opinions on the whole harassment in geek culture which made me subscribe to the blog. Below is Caliban latest installment on harassment at conventions, regarding SDCC and how policies should be put into to place ASAP.

 The SDCC harassment failure


comiccon-150x150Once again, we find ourselves wading into the issue of harassment in geek culture. This time it hits the big arena that is San Diego Comic Con (SDCC).
The growing awareness of the issue of harassment at conventions has led to many conventions addressing this issue in increasingly clear language. I have written about this several times. We have seen good examples (such as the policies put forth by Emerald City Comicon and The Calgery Expo), bad examples (such as with Fan Expo Canada), and even tragic examples (as was the case with Aki Con).
But unlike these shows, SDCC is well known to mainstream culture. It is THE big show, sells out in 90 minutes, and getting to go is akin to getting the golden ticket.
In light of all these factors, a group called GeeksForCONsent created an online petition to urge SDCC to create a specific anti-harassment policy. Right now, what they have is a broad code of conduct that mentions harassment, but does not define what it means.
Specifically, the SDCC code of conduct is as follows:  Attendees must respect common sense rules for public behavior, personal interaction, common courtesy, and respect for private property. Harassing or offensive behavior will not be tolerated. Comic-Con reserves the right to revoke, without refund, the membership and badge of any attendee not in compliance with this policy. Persons finding themselves in a situation where they feel their safety is at risk or who become aware of an attendee not in compliance with this policy should immediately locate a member of security, or a staff member, so that the matter can be handled in an expeditious manner.
What GeeksForCONsent is looking for is a more clearly defined process that includes a visible reporting mechanism, signs around the convention outlining the policy, and staff training on how to handle these issues. If this sounds familiar, it is because I wrote about it here detailing Emerald City Comicons anti-harassment effort. These are also the steps that The Calgary Expo and many others adopted this year.
Unfortunately, any hope of this petition having any effect right now is stalled. We know this because the director of marketing for SDCC (Daniel Glanzer) has commented on the petition in an interview stating that he did not favor creating a more explicit and visible policy, because it may send the message that there is a harassment problem at SDCC.
I understand if you need to take a minute after reading that last sentence.
Glanzer’s stance is that he thinks that SDCC has taken sufficient steps to deal with harassment and anything else would just cause bad press. I want to go on record as disagreeing with Glanzer. While I do not think a policy needs to be point by point, I do feel it needs to be specific enough that it points out what harassment is defined as, and what mechanisms are in place for someone to report it and get help. In reading Glanzer’s, response I feel his message was that SDCC marketing and publicity was more important than making the convention a safe space. Not only do I find their position unsettling, I worry that they are sending a message to other convention organizers that they need not worry about their own harassment policies.
We are at a point in geek culture when the issue of inclusion vs harassment is now a major issue. Not every convention has a good policy, but as more incidents are having light shed on them, more organizers are taking steps to address the issue. The effects of these steps are visible. Conventions that make sure they are a safe space are reaping the benefits of good will and strong attendance.  Conventions that ignore the issue are getting bad reputations and are starting to see more people staying away.
My biggest concern is that SDCC does not have as much incentive to change, since it is the big dog of conventions. Even staying with their lack luster policy they are going to sell out. The only thing that might be able to change their position externally is a lot of very bad press, or boycotts from major figures in fandom.
My hope is that someone with clout, either inside or outside the organization, can convince them that updating their policy is in everyone’s best interest.
Until then, it is up to those of us in the trenches to keep pushing this message and demanding better.


As he has written in the past, a few conventions are making a difference, but there is still much, much more that needs to be done to ensure a safe healthy environment for all attendees. I hope you take the time to visit Fanboy News Network and check Caliban's other pieces. His writing is brilliant! Included is an online petition by GeeksForCONsent. Below is a link to their YouTube video. Make your voice be heard! Stand strong and stand together!

Cosplay =/= CONsent: Harassment Testimonies
Online petition

Samantha

Sunday 1 June 2014

Review - Leonardo A Short Documentary



Leonardo - A Short Documentary

Presented at Hot Docs 2013
8 minutes and 35 seconds
Directed & edited by Jeffrey Zablotny
with Stu Marks



I am a sucker for nostalgia and Leonardo hit me at a core with me.  It opens with a home video of a Ninja Turtle birthday in 1992.  Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles were one of the biggest toys in the 90's and the 1990 movie only made them more of a hit with the kids. Who didn't want the Ninja Turtles van?

Stu and his brother had the ninja turtles action figures from the movie that you could change the arms and legs. When they would play with the turtles, they would imagine the heating vents as the sewers that would be the ninja turtles world. Unfortunately Leonardo was lost in the vent and they were unable to recover him.

Stu had obviously thought about Leonardo several times over the past "10 to 15 years", because he decides to go back to his parents home and rescue Leonardo once and for all!

To me this movie is about childhood memories and the rescue of that special lost toy. I could not help but walk down memory lane with Stu. Haven't we all had that one toy for what ever reason was the most important possession in our lives? So much apart of you life, you might still have it to this very day? I was right there with Stu when he was talking about his childhood memories, reminiscing myself. So the brothers attempt to rescue Leonardo from the basement, than finally deciding trying from above was the best bet. After a couple of attempts, finally Leonardo is rising to the surface! That last few nail biting inches, when Leonardo was close enough for Stu to reach a hand in and grab Leonardo by the foot... I was giddy with Stu!! After all these years! Leonardo has finally emerged from the 'sewer'!!

If that scene at the end on the train, with Leonardo sitting on Stu shoulder doesn't stir your inner child and make you grin with at least one memory of joy you felt toward a toy. you are missing the point of this short but sweetly endearing doc. A beautiful shared moment of childhood.

Samantha