Articles for August, 2017

Google released some fascinating data about the coming total eclipse

Google released some fascinating data about the coming total eclipseSometimes the data just falls into place.  Data from Google shows that people around the United States are increasingly searching for information about the upcoming total solar eclipse.  But more than that, the people who are doing the most searching are actually the ones in the path of the eclipse, set to take place on August 21.  SEE ALSO: Your most basic and burning questions about next month's solar eclipse, answered That trend is so clear that the Google map showing searches for the word "eclipse" in the last seven days actually vaguely tracks the path the total eclipse will take across the country. This makes a lot of sense, right? The people most likely to search for "eclipse" or information about it are the ones in the path of the event itself. It's always fun to see a dataset reflect something you can intuitively understand. If you break down the data by metro region, the path carved through the country (and the search data) becomes even more clear. Idaho Falls-Pocatello, Idaho — which is in the path of the eclipse — is the metro area with the most interest in the eclipse in the past week, according to the search information, but if you widen that out to look at a search breakdown by state, Oregon has the most interest in the "eclipse" search. A map of the eclipse.Image: nasaOregon is actually the first state that will experience the total phase of the eclipse, when the moon fully passes in between the Earth and the sun, casting its dark shadow on the surface of the planet.  Totality will begin along the Oregon coast at 10:15 a.m. PT. The total solar eclipse will pass over about a dozen states before moving out to sea after leaving the South Carolina coast at about 3 p.m. ET. August 21 will mark the first time a total solar eclipse has been visible from the contiguous U.S. since 1979. Even if you aren't in the relatively small path of the total eclipse, you'll still be able to see at least a partial eclipse from any spot in North America. (Just be sure to grab some serious eclipse glasses to protect your eyes.)  WATCH: Sun spots


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Asian Actresses in the New ‘Star Wars’ Movie Are Getting Their Own Action Figures – NextShark

NextShark

Asian Actresses in the New 'Star Wars' Movie Are Getting Their Own Action Figures
NextShark
“Star Wars: Episode VIII – The Last Jedi” is still a few months away, but pictures of the characters' action figures have already surfaced online, including Rose Tico, played by Vietnamese-American actress Kelly Marie Tran. The Force is strong with ...

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André 3000 Is ‘Totally Fine’ With Retiring Outkast
André 3000 explains why he doesn't want to make another Outkast album.
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Funko’ 3 3/4″ Trollhunters action figures have shown up at retail! The paint masters were done by our very own Capt. Collector.
Funko’ 3 3/4″ Trollhunters action figures have shown up at retail! The paint masters were done by our very own Capt. Collector. Follow AFi on Instagram
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Funko’ 3 3/4″ Trollhunters action figures have shown up at retail! The paint masters were done by our very own Capt. Collector.
Funko’ 3 3/4″ Trollhunters action figures have shown up at retail! The paint masters were done by our very own Capt. Collector. Follow AFi on Instagram
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Journey Back to Punisher’s Vietnam Days with the Platoon

Get ready to paint it black with Garth Ennis and Goran Parlov’s long-awaited PUNISHER: THE PLATOON limited series, which will take us back to a pre-Punisher era this October. PLATOON takes place during the Vietnam War in the late 1960s when Frank Castle was just an innocent doe-eyed soldier…though he was never that innocent according to Ennis and Parlov, the duo behind PUNISHER MAX who are writing the story and drawing the art, respectively.

Speaking of, you could not find two more passionate guys for the job; they’re committed to accurately nailing the time period while also delivering an epic and detailed story filled with colorful characters. So, does Mr. Castle love the smell of napalm in the morning? What ‘Nam-related movies did the duo watch before tackling this project? Queue up some CCR and read our in-depth interview with Garth Ennis and Goran Parlov as they prepare us for a run in the jungle…

Marvel.com: So, guys, the hype for this comic series goes back to 2015 at least. What’s it like to finally see it come to fruition?

Garth Ennis: All the pages are in and no one got killed or tortured. So that’s not bad.

Goran Parlov: I just cannot wait to see it out. [I’m] thrilled people can finally read it soon. So much sweat over those pages, so many all-nighters…Yeah, I can’t be happier than I am now.

Marvel.com: You two have worked on Punisher books before. What do you each admire in one another when it comes to bringing Frank Castle to the page?

Garth Ennis: For me Goran is pretty close to being the definitive Punisher artist. He captures Frank’s essential character in his body language: The easy grace, the repressed violence, the lack of drama. The sense of a man just getting on with the job.

Goran Parlov: You can’t say that something or someone is perfect. It is more like a utopic value. But Garth, as a writer, is very close to it. He understands the storytelling, he knows what works in a comic sequence and what doesn’t, what is important and what is superfluous. He can explain himself perfectly with just [a] few words. The scripts are never over explanatory. There are no page-long explanations for a single panel. Short and concise, but everything is there in just [a] few lines. I like to think I can connect very easily with his scripts. [The] stories themselves are always top notch–sometimes funny, sometimes a pure horror, but never boring, and always involving. Matter of fact, I often find myself laughing while drawing, and I can’t help it. Which is good. Means that the thing works. If I am the first to laugh then everybody else will also. On the other side, there were some sequences that I really wanted somebody else [to draw] for me. Talk about “real horror” sequences. With Garth you always get the whole package, and I am addicted to it, to the point that I have problems with other writers. Because I am always looking for Garth in the scripts. Which brings me to a conclusion and to the very essence of your question: Working with Garth for me is very easy.

Marvel.com: This series will focus on Frank’s time in Vietnam, and I can already hear “Fortunate Son” playing in the background. How are you guys capturing the feel of that era as well as the utter grittiness and destruction of this war?

 Garth Ennis: The story is set during the Tet offensive of 1968, with Frank’s first battlefield command–an understrength platoon of US Marines–involved in the defense of Khe Sanh, the famous Marine base which was subjected to quite an arduous siege by the North Vietnamese Army. This is a look at the war from the point of view of the average grunt, who finds himself at the center of a maelstrom of unimaginable destruction. The U.S. expended vast reserves of firepower to hold the base, but somehow the matter is still decided in close combat, often hand-to-hand, with the Marines risking life and sanity to survive. At the same time, we’ll see Colonel Letrong Giap–from FURY: MY WAR GONE BY–whose NVA unit is one of those charged with taking Khe Sanh, as he struggles to carry out the often impossible orders he’s been given by the regime in Hanoi. With him is one Ly Quang, a young Viet Cong fighter with an agenda all her own after she comes off worse in an early encounter with Frank.

Goran Parlov: Well, this might sound strange, but I didn’t prepare myself by watching all those famous Vietnam movies. I just remembered them–I watched them while working on FURY: MY WAR GONE BY and previous Punisher books. I wanted to capture the sensation as I remembered it. Of course I had several screenshots and photos from the internet, but those were mostly for weapons, uniforms, machinery. I love to be pretty accurate about those. But the overall feel was completely from within my head. 

Marvel.com: In addition, were you influenced by any Vietnam War-related movies, comics, or other similar pieces of pop culture when putting this together?

Garth Ennis: My go-to reading on Vietnam would be “Nam” by Mark Baker, “If I Die in a Combat Zone” and “The Things They Carried” by Tim O’Brien, “A Bright Shining Lie” by Neil Sheehan, “A Rumor of War” by Philip Caputo, and “Rolling Thunder in a Gentle Land” edited by Andrew Wiest. The conflict hasn’t been particularly well served by comics; the only two that come to mind are Marvel’s THE NAM–the first couple of years’ worth–and Fighting Man by Alan Hebden and Cam Kennedy, which I recently managed to get reprinted in the Battle Classics series. For movies, I like “Apocalypse Now,” as much for the lunacy of it as anything else, and a curious little flick called “84 Charlie MoPic.” My favorite Vietnam War film is still “Full Metal Jacket,” partly because it’s so good, partly because I believe a peculiar war deserves a peculiar movie.

Goran Parlov: I was at the middle of the book, three or four episodes behind me, when I decided to watch Oliver Stone’s “Platoon.” It completely confused me. I was all like, “Oh my god, this thing is made this way and not like I did it. That other thing is also different.’ I found a billion things that are not like in my pages…and that blocked me completely. [I was] totally confused. Should I re-draw all those things? Should I start all over from the beginning? Then I talked shortly with Garth about that. He didn’t understand what exactly I thought I did wrong. Well, his question put me back at ease, but deep inside I still felt a bit frustrated. Fortunately, the scenery changed completely in the next few issues and I was able to put all the things that I’ve seen and loved in “Platoon.” My frustration disappeared and no harm has been done to the previous pages. Actually, later on I was very happy with how the things merged together with positive results.

Marvel.com: In your own words, how would you describe this Frank Castle compared the one we know in pop culture? Put another way, will readers be surprised at this facet of Frank?

Garth Ennis: As I say, this is Frank’s first combat command, and in fact his first time in battle. Not even 20, he’s been entrusted with the lives of two dozen young Marines whose abiding motivating factor is the desire to survive their tours of duty, go home, and never look back. He’s been plunged straight into the unspeakable hell of close quarter combat, and expected not just to survive but to lead- and to win.  Now, that may seem like an insurmountable task, but I personally believe that Frank was never really particularly green or raw, never some blushing virgin. I think he hit the ground running–partly because he grew up with a certain degree of street smarts and was therefore possessed of strong survival instincts from the get-go, and partly because of whatever was waiting inside him, something that began to awaken as soon as he arrived in Vietnam. Frank has the enviable ability to watch, learn, and act fast–so even before the bullets started flying he at least had a pretty good idea what not to do.

Goran Parlov: I think there will be no surprises. Speaking about his character features, he is the same Frank Castle as we know in PUNISHER MAX, only younger and in a different environment. But I am sure readers will recognize Frank right away under that helmet.

Marvel.com: Going off that, can you talk a little bit about the psychological trauma he’ll be going through in this series and how it will impact his transformation into Punisher?

Goran Parlov: I could find a word or two about the argument, but I’d prefer to leave this question to Garth.

Garth Ennis: Once Second-Lieutenant Castle begins to reveal himself as a first-class problem-solver, certain figures within the military establishment will start keeping an eye on him, only too keen to exploit his particular skill set. So the events in THE PLATOON will at least start him down the road he’s on. Of course, this is only his first tour of duty, and the events of BORN happen during his third, so he has a long way to go on his journey to Firebase Valley Forge. I’ve hinted at some of the things he got up to on his second tour before, and maybe one day soon I’ll get a chance to go into more detail on them.

Marvel.com: What can you tell us about the supporting characters in this story and the way in which they affect Frank’s journey? 

Garth Ennis: There’s the aforementioned LeTrong Giap, who initially has too much of an eye on the big picture to worry about some young American officer. There’s also Ly, who wants to kill our hero with all her heart–and then dig him up and kill him again. [Then] there are the men of his platoon, initially wary of their new commander, but who gradually come to see him as their best and possibly only chance of survival as the war sucks them in deeper and deeper, and the horrors of ‘Nam close in around them. Speaking of BORN, you might say that in some ways THE PLATOON is the opposite of that story. It is, perhaps, a look at what might have been for Frank Castle.

Goran Parlov: Reading the story you can barely tell who the protagonist is and who the supporting characters are. They are all important for the story and all together meritorious for the magic. Back when I put my first sketches down on the paper, I thought of them [as if each] one of them is about to have a spinoff eventually. What I want to say is I always try to fall in love with each character and to love ‘em all the way. To personalize them, to give ‘em specific character…in a few words, to give them life. That is, [in] my opinion, how they eventually become interesting characters to me and ultimately to the readers. That is why I love Garth’s scripts because I can easily fall in love with his characters.

Pick up PUNISHER: THE PLATOON #1 in October!

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MisterWives Join the Marvel Podcast

The band MisterWives return to talk about their new album, Marvel super heroes they love and much more!

Download episode #297.5 of This Week in Marvel from Marvel.com, check out Marvel Podcast Central, grab the TWiM RSS feed and subscribe to This Week in Marvel on iTunes or Soundcloud! Head over now to our new hub to listen to the full run of This Week in Marvel including our latest episode!

This Week in Marvel focuses on delivering all the Marvel info on news and new releases–from comics to video games to toys to TV to film and beyond! New episodes will be released every Tuesday and Thursday (or so) and TWiM is co-hosted by Marvel VP Executive Editor of Digital Media Ryan “Agent M” Penagos and Editorial Director of Marvel Digital Media Ben Morse with Manager, Video & Content Production: Blake Garris, Editor Marc Strom, and Assistant Editor Christine Dinh. We also want your feedback, as well as questions for us to answer on future episodes! Tweet your questions, comments and thoughts about TWiM to @AgentM, @BenJMorse, @blakegarris or @Marvel with the hashtag #ThisWeekinMarvel!

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Star Wars Spotlight: Darth Vader and the Ghost Prison

Each week Star Wars Spotlight combs through the digital archives of Marvel Unlimited to showcase one classic story from that distant galaxy filled with Jedi, Sith, princesses, scoundrels and droids.

New regimes always take a certain amount of time to truly establish themselves. Though “Revenge of the Sith” saw Palpatine take control and the debut of Darth Vader, it still took time for the Empire to become the nearly all-powerful force witnessed in “A New Hope.” And it almost all came crumbling down soon after inception!

The Haden Blackman and Agustin Alessio five-issue limited series STAR WARS: DARTH VADER AND THE GHOST PRISON introduced the world to Laurita Tohm, a valedictorian in the first class of Imperial cadets. As it turned out, he remained one of the few soon-to-be-graduates in his group not part of General Gantis’ plot to overthrow Palpatine by nearly killing him with a virus and blowing up sizable portions of Coruscant. His reasoning? He despised how many of his trainees the Emperor sent to their graves in his mad quest for power.

Star Wars: Darth Vader And The Ghost Prison (2012) #1

Star Wars: Darth Vader And The Ghost Prison (2012) #1

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Tohm found himself in Darth Vader’s sphere of influence in the heat of battle and proved his worth. Before long, they made their way to the Emperor’s quarters to discover their leader a victim of poisoning. Trachta also stood by his side and the trio pledge to save Palpatine by taking him somewhere safe.

Remembering his days as a Jedi, Vader took Tohm to the old Jedi Temple where they both watched holovids of Anakin Skywalker wondering where his prisoners of war wound up. Though they refused to tell him, they discussed it after he left the conversation, letting Vader know about the ghost prison, also known as The Prism.

Set up as a way to hold dangerous prisoners during wartime, the prison essentially fueled itself and used but one Jedi as a guard. Vader made short work of her and his cohorts soon hooked Palpatine up to the facility’s advanced medical equipment to get him healthy again.

Realizing they’d need some kind of back-up in their mission to return Palpatine to power, Vader ordered all of the prisoners released and then told them to fight for their lives. 207 of them began the trials with only 33 surviving.

Meanwhile, Gantis continued amassing allies loyal to him, but still had to deal with Grand Moff Tarkin who left the nascent Death Star building site to come take command in Palpatine’s absence. Figuring out the play at hand, Vader and his crew contacted Tarkin and boarded his ship much to Gantis’ surprise!

Though Gantis had a good number of men on his side, they mostly ranked as new soldiers while Vader, Trachta and Tohm came backed by borderline maniacs and trained killers. They also had the revived Emperor on their side which turned the already tipping scales in their favor.

Afterwards, Trachta not only became a Grand Moff, but also took over as the new cadet trainer. He wanted to bring in the mercenaries as teachers or advisers, but Vader wanted to kill them. Tohm suggested they essentially exile them, a plan the Emperor agreed to. However, the ship exploded not long after take off which didn’t sit well with Trachta.

He made a much greater enemy in Vader, though, when Palpatine mentioned that the young man might make a worthy replacement if Vader ever fell in battle. The next time they saw each other, Vader tossed Tohm off a building while offering a piece of advice: “Never suffer rivals.”

From the Jedi Temple Archives

Trachta first appeared in 2002’s STAR WARS: EMPIRE #1, a book that we will get to shortly. Without giving too much away at this time, that series took place many years later after Emperor Palpatine had fully gained control of the cosmos with the aid of Darth Vader. In GHOST PRISON, we see a younger version of the character who questions which side of the conflict between Gentis and Palpatine truly defended the ideals of the Empire itself and which acted the traitor. The way that Tohm and Vader handled the prisoners-turned-mercenaries also didn’t sit well with the man who revealed in GHOST PRISON #3 that he lost his eyes thanks to a Padawan releasing a detonator to avoid capture.

Next time we check back in on Kir Kanos with STAR WARS: CRIMSON EMPIRE II by Mike Richardson, Randy Stradley, Paul Gulacy and Randy Emberlin.

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Emma Roberts Returns for American Horror Story: Cult: See the First Pic
Miss her? Emma Roberts is officially back on American Horror Story, b--ches! Creator Ryan Murphy spilled the good news on Instagram on Tuesday, posting a photo of the fan-favorite on the...
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Today is the official release date for #justiceleague movie product. (I found these #hotwheels yesterday. Oops!)
Today is the official release date for #justiceleague movie product. (I found these #hotwheels yesterday. Oops!)Follow AFi on Instagram
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