Facebook’s IPO may have fizzled, but Zuckerberg M&A a winner

It’s been said that  marriages are the love version of “mergers and acquisitions.”

In that sense, if you’re Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg what could be better  than to have a genuine back up to a not so smashing IPO?

Zuckerberg’s marriage to Priscilla Chan is actually a better story than the flat IPO.

It’s a reminder to the tech elite that the important stuff isn’t what’s under their noses on an HD screen, it’s the stuff that’s happening off-line in real life.

Creating the community on-line only makes sense if there’s something real going on off-line worth sharing.

Zuckerberg shared the news on Saturday.

It also reminds us that beyond the hardware and software and social networking platforms that all these smart people in the Valley  can create, the future of their businesses really depends on what goes on with them as people. You know matters of the heart. Honesty. Integrity. Doing the right thing. All that counts more than we see on a spread sheet. Sure, some greedy bastards still win, but not all the time.

So the real answer to the question as to the future of Facebook will be based on Zuckerberg’s ability to stay true to his personal vision and keep other corporate types from screwing it up.

I don’t know if that will happen, but the marriage news is a nice touch after Friday’s IPO. 

Marrying his Harvard sweetheart after 9 years?

Updating his status on the biggest weekend of his life was his best move ever. 

And on the week of her graduation from UCSF med school,  probably her’s too.

Congratulations to both.

The incredible potential of potential: On Facebook, commercial space travel and the 2012 graduates of SFSU

This week we have arrived at an exciting time when hope, dreams and potential have all come together in a combustible mix.  

We’ve got Facebook’s IPO, commercial space travel’s first big test , and my oldest kid’s college graduation all coming at once.

The excitement is all about the tremendous unknown. Upside? Anything can happen.

Including the downside.

Place your bets.

FACEBOOK

Is it heresy to say I was rooting for Facebook to come undone on the opening? 

There was a pop from $38 to $43 and a few billionaires were still made, but really, do the 1 percent really deserve more? To me, it just seemed more decent to bet against greed.

Better for the soul.

This is not to say I’m anti-Facebook or social networking (though I do favor Twitter). In fact, Facebook is a great American story of entrepreneurship and the drive to create the next big thing.  

When I was in college, I was romanced by the big ideas of the past. Hegel anyone? I wasn’t  tinkering around in the computer lab anticipating the future and the digital translation of everything in life.

I was thinking about  things like the Great American Novel, not the Great Killer App.

Oh, and I actually had the Facebook in my hands. The printed version. I was thinking about that person I met in the Freshman Union.  I was in the G’s.  So was some guy named Gates.

Over the last few days I’ve had several friends ask me about Facebook, and what could I say?  What’s it going to be worth in 5, 10, 20 years? Remember My Space? These tech things trend out.  Remember when Palm and Blackberry were way cool, then way not?

Speculation is a matter of heat and Facebook right now is both hot and not.  If you’re on it constantly, do you click on any ads?  Does the company really  know how it  will make money on advertising through social networking?

I don’t know the answers to Facebook’s future value. No one really does.

But this I know. If you’re a user, Facebook still knows more about you than you know about it.

So until things become a tad more transparent,  and the lucky buy their Ferraris and SF condos, Facebook remains that nice, nosy little utility of life and any big bet on it is all about faith, hope, and a whole lot of greed.

COMMERCIAL SPACE TRAVEL?

On Saturday comes the big rocket test for Space X, the big bet on commercial space flight that could bring the Jetsons to reality.

The Mile High Club?  Compared to Space X, that’s like necking in the backseat of a Mustang. With commercial space flight, we’re talking about reaching heights around 240 miles above the earth. 

Travelling in space may seem cool to the astrophysicists amongst us. But not me. Space? This is why God gave us telescopes—so that we can view the cosmos from our Lazy-Boy.  (Oh, actually, there is an app for that now, isn’t there?)

Still, if you’d like to fly non-stop someday from here to the space station,  I don’t want to be the person to say no.  Personally, I’d rather see a bullet train through the state. Or BART get a station in Livermore.

When you consider the billions of dollars needed just to see if commercial space travel is feasible during these very tenuous financial times, I’m wondering if the coolness factor of saying you can do it is enough reason to actually do it?

So I doubt if I’ll  be a Frequent Flyer.

I’m plenty happy  just  getting to Cincinnati every now and then to see my in-laws.  Given that’s like going back in time, who needs commercial space travel?

MY DAUGHTER’S SFSU COMMENCEMENT

Lastly, is there anything more hopeful than a graduation?

I’ll be on the field at San Francisco State’s Cox Stadium when my daughter Jilly crosses the stage with a B.S. in Geology.

This is a big deal for a family of liberal arts-types, who last considered science when people still used slide rules. (Youngsters, those really were considered accurate, to the nearest black line).

As a young girl, my daughter seemed destined to follow in her parents’ tradition.  In high school, she took chemistry for jocks (which was a little more than an analysis of Gatorade, but not by much). I knew she could do better, but I didn’t push her. I lectured. She didn’t listen. I made it her responsibility.

Still, here was a girl, and a person of color, who it was assumed, had no talent for the sciences. In today’s tech oriented world, that’s like saying you have no ticket to the future.

But boy, did she prove them all wrong. And all it took was some great professors at SFSU to help her discover that.

So while I’m proud of my daughter, I’m also a little worried about the future of our state’s high ed programs.  

SFSU may have a rockier road  ahead than my daughter.

The one thing about the state schools is they were always  there to assure a level of education for all.

Now with all the cutbacks in the state’s budget, I’m not so sure. 

For state schools, it’s all about resources, and currently there aren’t many. Even my daughter felt the pinch. She needed an extra year to graduate because she couldn’t get into required classes that were either cancelled, full, or not available.

I’m a big supporter of affirmative action. But that’s not the only answer to real educational equality.  You can bicker about college admissions all you want, but it still comes down to resources.

 What, after all, are you vying for admission to?  When budgets are cut, as my daughter found out searching for a basic chemistry course, sometimes it means there’s  “no there there.”

Graduation will be my celebration that there was a there for my daughter at 19th and Holloway.

I have no hesitation, nor doubts here.  My abundant hope is our state system will also be there for the vast numbers of Californians  in the future.

The grumbling among Asian Americans this graduation season is over affirmative action

Are Asian Americans really that happy graduating from their second-

choice school?  Resentment over college admissions threatens a sense of

unity among Asian Americans.

Check out my blog post at SFgate.com

or on the Asian American Legal Defense and Education Fund blog.

The man who once inked Spider-man, Tony De Zuniga,creator of Jonah Hex, Red Sonja, has died

 Tony De Zuniga, a Filipino American comic artist, who was among the

top artists at Marvel in its heyday, passed away this weekend in Southern California.

Here’s a story I did on him seven years ago while he lived in Stockton.

Stockton artist brought comic-book heroes to life

 

By Emil Guillermo,Record Staff Writer
January 21, 2005

Super talent

STOCKTON — Batman, Superman, Supergirl.
Spider-Man, the Fantastic Four, the Incredible Hulk.

Tony De Zuñiga literally
had them all under his thumb at one point in his life.

The 70-year-old Stockton artist
brought the power of the pen to his bosses at Marvel and DC comics and, through
that pen, brought superheroes to life.

“I’m lucky I had some real good
drawing teachers in the Philippines,” De Zuñiga said modestly in the
main room of The Islands, his new gallery/restaurant that he’s opening Saturday
with his wife, Tina.

She’ll hang most of the artist’s
comic drawings there, but no Spider-Man.

“He’s always giving away Spider-Man,”
she said, looking at her husband with a half-joking scowl.

The gallery will also feature fine
art from contemporary Philippine artists, the De Zuñigas’ native land.

Tony De Zuñiga himself is
a fine artist of some repute, having won first-place awards at last year’s Delicato
Art Show in Manteca, as well as the Mondovi Art Show in Lodi.

His award winner? A smiling Filipino
man holding his prized fighting cock.

“They liked the look of the champion,”
De Zuñiga said.

That was what De Zuñiga was
— a champion — for comic-book publishers DC and Marvel.

“In regards to comic books, he’ll
go down as one of the best,” said Manuel Auad, a publisher of books on comic-book
artists. “He’s very, very good. And he’s very fast. A pro.”

To this day, De Zuñiga hasn’t
lost a step.

“In the comics business, you’ve
got to draw fast, a hundred pages a month,” he said, grabbing a pencil and paper
for a quick demonstration.

He took off his Christian Dior shades
with big, flared lenses that give him the look a superhero, and replaced them
with work glasses: thick, frameless and clear. Modified granny specs that help
him see.

With his pencil, he drew a rounded
outline of a head, then dark, deep sockets for eyes that in seconds came alive
with real eyeballs. Next: the mouth, chin, side of the face and hair that flowed
to the shoulders.

“You don’t lose the point,” he said
of his special lead pencil which raced across the paper. “It sharpens itself.”

As he drew, the image’s shoulders
took shape with pecs and biceps. From the fingers, a long line went across the
chest as De Zuñiga created a sword.

“Yup,” De Zuñiga said. “He’s
a barbarian.”

With a little shading to the legs,
the drawing was complete: a three-minute Conan the Barbarian, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger’s
alter ego.

“I drew him for eight years. He’s
already in my head,” said De Zuñiga of his quick sketch. He said he’s
sent the governor some pieces to sign but hasn’t heard back yet.

Trained in the Philippines, De Zuñiga
came to America to attend the New York School of Design. He graduated, returned
to the Philippines but missed the big city. In the late 1960s, he came back
to work as a commercial artist. But his big break came when he met an editor
at DC Comics who wanted him to do a “House of Mystery” comic book.

“The editors loved it,” De Zuñiga
said. “And that’s the start of it all.”

He was the first of dozens of Filipino
artists to come to America to work in comics.

“De Zuñiga’s importance cannot
be overstated,” said the journal Comic Book Artist, which praised him for his
muscular and beautiful female warriors.

De Zuñiga he is best known
for creating Jonah Hex, a western anti-hero created in the early 1970s. Hex
is John Wayne on crack, a bad guy from unknown origins who found no price too
small if it was attached to someone’s head.

“They wanted something like the
spaghetti Westerns that were popular at the time,” said De Zuñiga, referring
to Westerns financed by Italian companies that featured actors such as Lee Van
Cleef and Clint Eastwood.

De Zuñiga did what he was
told. But unlike comic-book writers today, he got no royalties. Now, he says
he was cheated.

“Today, you get paid,” he said.
“Back then, they said, ‘You’re already drawing it, why don’t you just write
the whole book.’ ”

De Zuñiga followed orders.
But isn’t bitter about any of it. He has nothing but kind words for his ex-employers
such as Marvel’s Stan Lee.

“He’s a good guy, a very animated
fellow,” he said.

These days, De Zuñiga attends
comic-book conventions and is often asked to do “reconstructions.” That’s where
fans request old Jonah Hex or Conan covers. De Zuñiga said 40 percent
of his requests are for a female character that came out of the Conan series,
Red Sonja.

“She’s a barbarian girl, a fantasy
character just like Conan,” he said. “But I wanted them to do more with her.
She’s always underplayed.”

Since most of the original art work
he’s done is gone, De Zuñiga puts together for his fans brand-new ink
drawings, often in full color — but with a difference.

“I hate doing it exactly the same,
like a Xerox copy,” he said. Besides, the old stuff, De Zuñiga said,
is boring by today’s standards. “We had it easier back then, but we didn’t know
that because there were no special effects those years.”

Movies, with all their snap, crackle
and pop realism, have challenged the comic artists’ vision, he said. But the
artist still prevails.

“They have moving pictures, but
we’re still visual — the artist can still compete,” De Zuñiga said.

De Zuñiga has experience
in animation and video. He worked for Sega a few years ago, creating characters
and environments for games such as “Dynamite Cops.”

But he knows it all ultimately still
comes down to some paper, a pen and an artist’s vision.

With just those tools, De Zuñiga
has no trouble summoning up the fantasy world of the superhero within.

Emil Guillermo's amok commentary on race, politics, diversity…and everything else. It's Emil Amok's Takeout!