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Showing posts with label Inside the Old House. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Inside the Old House. Show all posts

Sunday, February 12, 2012

The first Collinsport Historical Society contest!



I was going through my modest collection of Dark Shadows items the other day and discovered I own TWO copies of Inside the Old House #61. The 52-page fanzine was independently published in 1997 and can be difficult to find, so I thought I'd share it with one of my readers.

The book features an installment of  the "Untold 1872 Flashback" (a series of imaginary episode summaries taking place after the cancellation of Dark Shadows,) an original short story, Dark Shadows classified ads, scans of vintage magazine clippings and more. And you have three ways to win a copy of this book:

1: Go over to the Collinsport Historical Society's Facebook page and "Like" us (CLICK HERE);
2: Follow us on Twitter (CLICK HERE);
3: Or join this webpage with Google Friend Connect under the "Members in Good Standing" to your right.

The winner will be randomly selected from my followers on all three sites, so if you sign up for all three it triples your chances of winning. The winner will be announced Feb. 26, 2012. Keep in mind that this book is a physical artifact and will have to be delivered via snail mail. I will need a name and address so, if you're worried such a disclosure might pose a risk to your career as a costumed superhero, it will make delivering the prize a tad difficult.

Good luck!

UPDATE: I think it's worth mentioning that this contest is open to ALL of my followers. If you've been signed up since the very beginning, consider yourself already entered into the contest. Also, all of you porn stars trying to follow me on Twitter? I appreciate that you're willing to take your clothes off  (and I didn't even have to ask!) but I have my suspicions that your Twitter accounts aren't real. At least, they're not "real" in the way George Berkeley might have defined it.

Sunday, January 29, 2012

Dark Shadows in TV Guide, 1969

Courtesy on the Inside the Old House fanzine, here's a column by Cleveland Armory from a Feb. 1, 1969 issue of Dark Shadows. I like the part where he singles out two children for ridicule. What an asshole.

Friday, November 25, 2011

Welcome to Collinwood

A few years ago I bought a lot of Marilyn Ross' Dark Shadows novels from an Ebay seller. Stuffed between the pages of one of these yellowed pulp romances was something I found quite charming: an empty envelope mailed from the president of a fan club called United Fans for Jonathan Frid. It also included a note on the back reading "Jonathan Frid Rules" (you can get a closer look at both details by clicking the photo to your left.)

I've always been vaguely aware of "analog fandom," groups that had to communicate via telephone, letters and gatherings in the decades before the Internet. Many of these people communicated for years before ever meeting each other, if they ever met each other at all. They expressed themselves in stories, art, poems and essays which were usually circulated through inexpensive mimeographed newsletters. This kind of fandom kept alive the interest in everything from the stories of Robert E. Howard to Star Trek, and the passions of fandom might even be the reason we're still talking about these things today.

The cover of an issue of
Inside the Old House, a long-running
Dark Shadows fanzine.
By all rights, Dark Shadows fans are the folks that should have been building message boards and Angelfire pages back when the Internet began to really take hold in the '90s. Unfortunately, the fans who spent their time writing Dark Shadows fanfic, episode guides and poetry seemed to have disappeared as the digital outlet was beginning to blossom. There were a few DS fan pages here and there, but their content lacked the obsessive attention to detail of their analog ancestors (not to mention their imagination.)

Since I discovered the letter from Betty Patterson and the United Fans for Jonathan Frid I've asked around, very casually, about where these fans are today. I've also come across a few of the many, many fanzines produced by these men and women since Dark Shadows left the airwaves and will be sharing excerpts from them over the next few months. With luck, maybe some of the creators of these publications will take notice and share a few words about their work.





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