Meet Matt & Kseniya, Brooklyn Zine Fest Organizers

6937956136_c047984243_b

Tell us a little about yourselves.
We are partners in almost everything we do, though Kseniya is better at most of it. As the organizers of the Brooklyn Zine Fest (second annual is Sunday, April 21st 2013 at Public Assembly in Williamsburg!) and in our own zines like I Love Bad Movies, we’ve gotten to work with so many amazing writers and artists that it’s almost embarrassing. And every time we get a new bookcase, it is immediately filled.

Who or what are your influences?
Matt: I’m interested in the places and stories you don’t usually see and hear. Davy Rothbart tells the untold tales in his own writing and as the editor of FOUND Magazine, and his work has long been a spirit-guide in my own.

Kseniya: Julia Child, for her zest and spice of life more than her cooking. She took a few decades to figure out what she wanted and loved to do, which is comforting since those things aren’t immediately clear for everybody. As she wrote in My Life in France, “The pleasures of the table, and of life, are infinite – toujours bon appétit!”

What subjects do you touch upon in your work?
In an abstract way: dedication and (healthy) obsession about art and other people.

In a straightforward way: good movies, bad movies, game shows, geography, body parts (mostly human), Internet dating, and cultural history.

What is your most recent work?
Matt is putting the final touches on Come on Down, a zine of essays by game show contestants, writers, producers, and viewers, about a whole slew of shows that you’ve watched many times.  It’s a collection of glimpses into a very polished world that doesn’t normally open itself up to the curious.  Every piece is revealing and fascinating in different ways.

Kseniya just finished Fig. 1, the first in a zine series that celebrates weird, bold, and occasionally uncomfortable diagrams collected from a huge range of books and pamphlets.  This one is themed “Human Bodies,” so there’s plenty of awkward situations.

What are you looking forward to most at the fest?
Mostly, we want to incite a terrible rivalry between Scranton and Wilkes-Barre that turns brother against sister and frenemies into actual enemies.  But once that’s done, we (lacka)wanna meet new folks from the northeast reaches of Penn’s Woods and read the stories they’re telling.

Photo credit by Anna White.

Meet Kenny, Creator of Anisocoriac Media

snapshot_20130205_1

Tell us a little about yourself.
I am a huge dork. I like my music loud and angry, my movies weird, and my comedy dark and absurd. Lastly, one of my cats is scratching at my bedroom door and crying as I type this.

Who or what are your influences?
I am mostly influenced by real events in my personal life, and the wacky contents of my heart and brain. Both sources have, over the years, proven to be  goldmines of ridiculous comics, or totally sad and dorky perzines, no matter how mundane and boring the actual event or thought may have been. The music I choose as the soundtrack to cutting and pasting and stapling my zines can be influential too. When it’s zine-making time, you will find me blasting Black Flag’s My War, or The Replacements’ Sorry Ma… as I paste a picture of a two-legged head getting excited about paying his electric bill online.

What subjects do you touch upon in your work?
When making a humor zine, I compile all of the silly and out there images and thoughts that I capture in a jar the moments that they occur to me. It doesn’t make sense most of the time, but I get belly laughs out if it. Like in a zine I did last year, This is Bullshit – I created a comic about a guy who can only get off when his sexual partners trade aphorisms with him. Nonsense, but silly enough to make me giggle. In my more personal work, I tend to spill my guts all over the place regarding my frustrations and anxieties. They are honest but hopefully humorous too, as I have a natural tendency to poke fun at myself frequently.

What is your most recent work?
Most recently, I completed a humor zine called You Are Clearly Not Amused. I completed it in literally 20 minutes on a Friday night at 3:00 AM. It’s one of those things that you just have to see for yourself and decide if it’s for you. Around the same time, I also put together a perzine called A Freak Among Freaks: Confessions of a Neurotic Outsider. It’s about how a staggering number of individual aspects of my social anxiety and my recurring frustration with my self-image went into making very minor decision on a Saturday night last summer. As with all of my perzines, I hope to reach other people who may be experiencing anxieties that may fuck up their social lives.

What are you looking forward to most at the fest?
I love wondering who I will be sharing a table with. I get lucky in that aspect – I have always shared tables with the most humble and friendly zinesters you would ever want to meet. Last year’s SZF was no exception. The people I meet at my table are also awesome, and I always look forward to sharing thoughts, hopes, fears, etc,. with people from all places (geographically, culturally, emotionally). Last but not least, coming away from a fest with all sorts of zine-loot – be it brand new zines from my favorite zinesters, or new and old work from someone whose zines I am discovering for the first time There is absolutely nothing like coming home from a zinefest with a bag full of new, personally-printed and bound expressions of radical politics, anxieties, enthusiastic declarations, etc. Viva la fucking zine, man!

Meet Joseph, Creator of Displaced Snail Publications

photo-on-5-10-12-at-11-56-am

Tell us a little about yourself.
I’ve been making zines for, gosh, about six years now, and my first was a tiny collection of poetry, comics, short stories, music reviews – everything – that was sold in sets of five in Popsicle stick boxes. I’ve been a teacher for a few years, too, and now I work for the same school I was at as a content writing and consultant in publishing and online media, which is cool. And finally, my cat, Georgia, has taken to sleeping in the bar, behind the wine and the moonshine, and I’m worried she’s finding unsavory ways of dealing with her stress.

Who or what are your influences?
Biggest would probably be Kurt Vonnegut Jr., you know, that stuff that really means a lot to you in high school really sticks with you. His combination of funny, dark, and sad, mostly. I also find David Bazan’s music really inspiring.

What subjects do you touch upon in your work?
A lot of animals doing human things. And I’m getting into a lot of educational stuff. And vinyl records, and nature, and things that are really spooky and dark, and ghosts.

What is your most recent work?
I have two projects I’m excited for this zine fest: Tiny Robot, a HUGE series of short zines on Greek and Latin roots, and how they work, and sometimes, how they affect pop culture. And The Forest and Fauna, a bedtime story read on vinyl, that’s supposed to be real spooky!

What are you looking forward to most at the fest?
Talking to everyone! I met such cool characters at the last one. And some real kooks. Zine fests rule.

Meet James, Author of Wasted Potential

stay-evil

Tell us a little about yourself.
I am a 27-year-old writer, musician and artist from Washington DC who’s been engaging in those crafts ever since childhood. I love cats, vegan junk food and tasteless adolescent humor. I’m chronically restless and insatiably curious, and this gnawing mental hunger is what provoked me to create Wasted Potential.

Who or what are your influences?
Neil Young, 80′s punk, 90′s indie, 90′s cartoon duos, William Burroughs, Joan Didion, pessimistic sociological assessments, outsider art, the impending end of civilization, Zen meditation, etc; etc; etc.

What subjects do you touch upon in your work?
Personal experience, observations of unrest and alienation, and being able to laugh it all off at the end of the day.

What is your most recent work?
Issue #1 of Wasted Potential.

What are you looking forward to most at the fest?
Meeting awesome people and checking out their awesome work!

Grants & Invites

anthill

Grant Information

Thank you very much to the County Commissioners of Lackawanna County as well as the Pocono Council on the Arts for providing us with the much-needed funds to facilitate the festival. We are super appreciative for your generosity over the years. With this support, we plan to add new workshops in addition to a discussion panel consisting of underground newspaper collectors, writers, letterpress artists and more. One workshop we are currently establishing is a cooking demonstration with locally-produced foods from the Anthill Farm CSA (community supported agriculture) located in Honesdale, Pennsylvania. CSAs are a great way to give back to the land and farmers in our area and gain fresh, organic produce. After all, Pennsylvania is mostly rural! That being said, why not hop on over to our Kickstarter page and give the Scranton Zine Fest that extra boost to help pay for these awesome workshops and panels. You’ll get some nifty handmade stuff in return, ya dig?

Etsy Invites

For a couple of days now, many of you may have been receiving some Etsy invites to the festival due to the review of your zines or art. We’ve been looking for some outstanding pieces to include in our festival and we’re looking for some new faces to add to the already existing awesomeness of our returning veterans (thank you to all those who come back; your support is what keeps us going!).

If you are located within New York City or Philadelphia, the Martz Bus Trailways is located in these bus terminals and will drive you directly to Scranton. You will get off at a bus station within walking distance to our venue. If you are are too far away to make it in, yet you would still like to be part of the festival in some way, we do accept prints or zines to be mailed to the address we provided you within your Etsy message. We will set up a little display for you just as long as you include the prices of your work. We will try to sell your work at the front table and whatever does not sell, we will mail back along with your profits. We do not accept any commission. No catch-22, promise.

2 Weeks to Go!

Hey guys! Just reminding you that our Kickstarter page is up and ready (with only two more weeks to reach our goal)! Thank you very much to Kenny Amato, Edward Dermody, and A.j. Michel for a total donation of $50.00 towards our cause. Our goal is to get a panelist of rad speakers, poets, zinesters, underground newspaper artists and writers to add to our festival. Thank you for all your support. Please tell your friends about the fest!