Next on Earth Station One…

ET amoung other were in the class of 82Next week, the ESO crew travels back in time to 1982, a magical year filled with one blockbuster movie after another. ET: The Extra Terrestrial, Conan The Barbarian, Fast Times at Ridgemont High, Blade Runner, The Thing, First Blood, Swamp Thing, Tron, Porky’s, Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan, and more.

ESO wants to hear from you. Tell us your 1982 movie memories at http://www.esopodcast.com, at the ESO Facebook Group, @EarthStationOne on Twitter, email us at esopodcast@gmail.com, or call us at 404-963-9057. We might just read yours on the show. Plus, join us for the usual rants, raves, shout outs, and Mike’s Khan Report! It’s going to be an action-packed episode next week at Earth Station One.

The ESO Crew

New Pulp’s Table Talk – What’s in a Translation?

After a week away to recharge the batteries, the Table Talk Team returns to New Pulp with a brand new and exciting topic. And they even brought along a couple of friends. This week, Barry Reese, Bobby Nash and Mike Bullock are joined in the conversation by New Pulpers Tommy Hancock and Van Allen Plexico as the guys discuss translating pulp characters into other mediums.

New Pulp’s Table Talk – What’s in a Translation? is now available at http://www.newpulpfiction.com or at the direct link: http://www.newpulpfiction.com/2011/11/table-talk-whats-in-translation.html

Join the conversation. Leave us a blog comment at and let us know your thoughts on this topic.

Stan Lee Media, Inc. files suit against ‘Conan’

Conan vs. Stan Leeby Annie Barrett, Source: EW.com

Stan Lee Media, Inc., a company founded by comic book legend Stan Lee, wants a judge to rule that it is still the rightful owner of the character Conan the Barbarian. In a lawsuit filed Aug. 19 in federal court in L.A. and obtained by EW, SLMI is demanding 100 percent of the film’s proceeds. The company claims its bankruptcy in 2001 would have prevented anyone from taking the rights to the Conan character away. In the suit, Stan Lee Media, Inc. claims the company was betrayed by a former lawyer who made an illegal deal to transfer the rights to another company that would later green-light this summer’s Conan movie. The poorly reviewed remake earned $10 million on its opening weekend, barely beating the debut of the original Conan the Barbarian in 1982.