
- #CINCINNATI COMIC EXPO SCHEDULE HOW TO#
- #CINCINNATI COMIC EXPO SCHEDULE MOVIE#
- #CINCINNATI COMIC EXPO SCHEDULE PROFESSIONAL#
- #CINCINNATI COMIC EXPO SCHEDULE TV#
It is a photo opportunity in the literal sense of the word. The process is very quick without time to converse with the guest or guests. To avoid confusion, a photo op is not a meet and greet. Your photo is ready in around a minute after the photo has been taken with our “print it in a minute” technology.
#CINCINNATI COMIC EXPO SCHEDULE PROFESSIONAL#
We then print a high quality 8×10″ of the photo on professional dye-sublimation photo printers. The photo is taken under ideal lighting conditions and with a top of the line DSLR camera. Please be sure to read the entire page, especially if you are unfamiliar with the photo op process or if you have not had photo ops with us in the past.Ī photo op is a photo taken with you and the celebrity guest or guests you have purchased a ticket for. The information contained within this page will help you make the most of your photo op experience. We want to get kids to draw.Please bear in mind, the photo op schedule will not be released until approximately 2-3 weeks prior to the event.īe sure to revisit the photo op schedule often to check for changes.

Some of the games are fair-like, but we also have drawing stations to keep it comic-centric, art-associated. Kids can play with Nerf archery sets and pretend they’re Hawkeye, or throw a Captain America Frisbee at a cutout of Red Skull. “It started as a corner but now it takes up a good portion of the floor. “Our owner has four kids, so he wanted a kids’ zone so there’s something for the whole family, not just artists and collectors,” Bredestege said. The theme for the geek prom this year is “Enchantment Under the Sea,” to commemorate the 30th anniversary of “Back to the Future.” There will be the usual tabletop gaming, and the kids’ zone is also growing. For the first time, the Expo is incorporating the annual Cincinnati Zombie Walk, where people can dress up as their favorite undead and shamble their way to the Freestore Food bank to donate one non-perishable food item. The usual supplemental activities and events will also be available, with an occasional twist. “He’s one of the last Golden Age artists who are still out there. “Bellman is 90 years old, and still drawing and doing original work,” Bredestege said. On the comic book side, Bredestege said the biggest draws in 2015 will be Neal Adams (“Batman,” “Superman”), Mike Zeck (“The Punisher”), and Allen Bellman (“Captain America”). His agent reached out to us, and of course we said ‘yes.’” They’re campy movies, but a lot of people are watching them and talking about them on social media. “He’s doing the sequel to ‘Lavalantula’ this summer. “We worked with a rep of his last year, and he told (Guttenberg) about our show,” he said.
#CINCINNATI COMIC EXPO SCHEDULE TV#
Guttenberg recently starred in the TV movie, “Lavalantula,” a ‘Sharknado’-type film about a volcano eruption that spews fire-breathing giant spiders onto Los Angeles.

#CINCINNATI COMIC EXPO SCHEDULE MOVIE#
On the reverse side, Katrina Law (“Spartacus,” “Arrow”) was just cast into a movie that starts production on Sunday, so she’ll be doing one day instead of the (originally scheduled) two.”īredestege said the Steven Guttenberg connection was a surprise, given that he has appeared at only one other event of this type. “‘Gotham’ is filming right now, but because it’s filmed in New York, it’s close enough so that (Robin) can fit it into his schedule. “There are always production schedules to work around,” he said.

Bredestege reminded us that these appearances are often subject to change. Some of those bigger names include 1980s movie star, Steve Guttenberg, Sean Astin (“Lord of the Rings”), Robin Lord Taylor (“Gotham”), Ian Ziering (“Beverly Hills 90210,” “Sharknado”), and the original Batman and Robin, a.k.a. But our name is getting out there year after year, which leads to bigger names and guests.”
#CINCINNATI COMIC EXPO SCHEDULE HOW TO#
If you ask 4,000 people, you’ll get 4,000 different ideas on how to run a show.

Obviously, you can’t listen to everybody. It’s locally supported and organized, not a corporate thing. The fans like how it’s a big show but it has a small show feel. “Our attendance has grown by leaps and bounds,” said Matt Bredestege, administrator for the Expo. 18 to 20 at Duke Energy Convention Center is unabashedly commercial, devoted as much to overall pop culture as comic books. More Info: Unlike the Cincy Comicon, a related event that occurred recently, the Cincinnati Comic Expo Sept.
