![]() ![]() The panelists said their intent was not to glorify drugs they envisioned the drug as something that's more of a prescription than a back-alley substance. "You take it and you're suddenly able to do all these things and be so much more creative," said the woman questioning the panel. Toward the end of the "Limitless" panel, the cast was asked about the show's seeming glorifcation of drug use. ![]() For example: "What's the largest snake in the world?" "Who is the actress that King Kong took to the top of the Empire State Building in the original movie?" The audience member missed that one, to the dismay of Fay Wray fans. Having fun with the crowd, the "Zoo" crew made anyone who asked a question answer a question that they made up on the spot. Sometimes the animals will fall asleep during takes, making the cast and crew wait around until the diva animals are ready to perform. "There is not enough Claritin in the world to make me hold a baby leopard," he said. ![]() Wolk, for instance, is allergic to cats, and can't hold some animals. They talked about having to act sometimes against things that aren't there before the special effects are added, and about having to deal with animals. "Zoo" brought series stars James Wolk, Kristen Connolly, Billy Burke and Nora Arnezeder and executive producers Jeff Pinkner and Josh Appelbaum to Ballroom 20. "Of course," she said, though there were some groans in the crowd. In a mashup of worlds, Schlattmann asked Helgenberger if her "CSI" investigator would be able to catch Dexter. As a producer on "Dexter," he also saw similarities in how to develop arcs that could make even serial killers sympathetic. There were no big reveals, but Schlattmann elaborated on the show's appeal, comparing it to reality shows, and to the phenomenon of getting a group of people together and watching what happens. In the "Under the Dome" panel, series stars Mike Vogel, Colin Ford, special guest star Marg Helgenberger and executive producers Neal Baer and Tim Schlattmann appeared. Last up in CBS' Comic-Con show was "Scorpion." The TV show begins exactly where the film left off. ![]() and as FREEWARE downloads, what have you to lose.The CBS presentation continued with panels for "Under the Dome" and "Zoo," followed by a quick intro to the Bradley Cooper-produced "Limitless." Cooper sent along a video message thanking the crowd for showing up, and explaining that the show was an extension of the movie that he starred in. However, with the number of artists here, someone may find a use for one or the other in their arsenal. I have no affiliation with these programs, nor have I tried them out. Take advantage of TwistedBrush Pro Studio SPECIAL pricing of $89 until June 30th!! (normally $119)"įor MAC users, I also recently came across a free Vector application called "Drawberry" which may interest someone. TwistedBrush runs on all versions of the Windows operating system and is designed for all realms of digital art "TwistedBrush has more than 5,000 brushes available, along with all the features that artists love to use: layers, realistic media, photo cloning, tracing, masks, particles, filters, script recording, scripts to AVI, drawing tablet support, brush shapes, patterns, textures, Adobe compatible plug-in support, integrated scanner support, image brushes, drawing guides, reference image views, dirty brushes, scratch layer, dynamic palettes and a whole lot more. Not sure how much interest this will develop, but one of the newsletters I subscribe too, had an article on "Twisted Brush Open Studio" a freeware version of "Twisted Brush Pro Studio" which advertises itself as Digital Painting and Photo Editing. ![]()
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