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Crowds flock to Saudi Arabia's first Comic Con

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Crowds flock to Saudi Arabia's first Comic Con

By Bianca Britton and Basma Atassi, CNN
Updated 1346 GMT (2146 HKT) February 20, 2017

Saudi Arabia hosts its first Comic Con 01:31
Story highlights
  • Over the weekend fans turned up for Saudi Arabia's first Comic Con
  • At the three-day festival, which was part of a Saudi government initiative, women and men were allowed to mingle
  • A hashtag calling Comic Con a "devil worshipping" festival became popular on Twitter

(CNN)Dressed all in black with her face exposed, Fatima Mohammed Hussein has come to Saudi Arabia's first Comic Con event dressed as Bat Girl.

"The minute I stepped in, I couldn't believe this is happening here," she told CNN. "It's a big move for Saudi to have something like that."
Hussein was one of the many Saudis who dressed up and flocked to the coastal city of Jeddah to celebrate pop culture, comic books, video games, and film between February 16 and 18.
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Fatima Mohammed Hussein dressed as Bat Girl at Saudi Arabia's first Comi Con event.

The three-day festival was part of a government initiative to bring more entertainment to Saudi Arabia, which bans public cinemas and theater.
"When you enter into the tent, you forget that you are in Saudi Arabia," Abdul Rahman Bakhsh, 25, an engineer and an avid YouTuber, who came to the event dressed in rustic armor over a black faux suede pullover and armed with a spear, told CNN.
With his friend, Ameer, he documented the Comic Con experience on YouTube video, starting with their search for costumes.
"There is a lot of creativity in Comic Con. People really interacted with the event and their costumes were amazing," Bakhsh said.
Gender mixing
Young men and women crowded into the tent, mingling near stands for comics and video games -- a remarkable scene for a government-sponsored event in a country where gender segregation is imposed in many public spaces.
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People arrive at Saudi Arabia's first Comi Con.
A long queue formed in front of the booth of a group of talented female artists who -- with make-up -- created scars, injuries and anime-inspired faces. "It was Hollywood-level creativity," Bakhsh said.
A separate female-only tent was set up for women who wanted to take off their traditional abayas and show off their costumes.
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A Lebanese woman poses for a selfie with a man dressed up as "Iron Man" during Saudi Arabia's first ever Comic-Con event in the coastal city of Jeddah on February 16, 2017.
Saudis at the event also had the opportunity to attend panel discussions with Charles Dance and Julian Glover from "Game of Thrones," Giancarlo Esposito from "Breaking Bad," and Mads Mikkelsen from "Doctor Strange."
Other panels featured Saudi producers and actors, including cast members from the upcoming Saudi superhero show, "Mas'hour" -- meaning "Bewitched."
Comi Con history
Comic Con events began in 1970 in San Diego and have slowly spread across the world. But before this festival, fans from Saudi Arabia had to outside the country to attend Comic Con events.
The Saudi version was organized by local company Time Entertainment. Its public relations manager Hisham AlSaeed said that Comic Con's international presence gave Saudi Arabia the perfect opportunity to highlight homegrown talent.
"There's a lot of talent (here) when it comes to comics, animations, anime (and) movie production," he said.
AlSaeed said the initiative was inspired by the huge demand for a Comic Con in his country, illustrated partly by the rise in people holding their own cosplay competitions at small, underground private events.
"(Comic Con) has never been done publicly like this, it has just never been set up," he said.
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Attendees dress up and genders mix at Saudi Arabia's first Comi Con.
Setting up the event took over a year, and a balance was struck to keep the spirit of the Comic Con while adhering to the country's religious regulations.
Indecent symbols or logos that went against Islamic teachings were prohibited and attendees were not allowed to cross-dress.
Even then, there was uproar online against what was considered a Western phenomenon in the traditional Islamic kingdom.
A hashtag calling Comic Con a "devil worshipping" festival became popular on Twitter and some called for boycotting it.
Cultural reforms
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A woman has her face made up at the event.
The event, which was supported by the Saudi Arabia's General Entertainment Authority, is part of country's "Vision 2030" program, which is promising a wave of cultural reforms to diversify the kingdom's oil-dependent economy.
AlSaeed said his team is planning to make this an annual event.
"We're considering this a soft Comic Con in Saudi Arabia, and then the next (one) will be way bigger.
"I'm hoping by next year we have a full cast of 'The Walking Dead', but we also have a lot of casts of our own movies and TV shows," he said.

http://edition.cnn.com/2017/02/19/middleeast/saudi-arabia-comic-con/



Some photos are missing from the article but I cannot copy them (they are from Instagram) for some reason.
 
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I am not sure if I am more surprised about this comic con actually taking place in KSA (not so much Jeddah in fact) and this event being government-sponsored despite mixing taking place or the fact that a Western media have written a somewhat positive article about KSA and its people. Yes, ordinary people live in KSA like anywhere else for those in doubt.

The world must truly face extinction soon for such things to occur.

Saudi Arabian Pablo Escobar, lol.


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This is awesome, are the Saudi's planning an E3? I would go to that!:lol:

That should be the next step as gaming is a quite big thing in KSA and the GCC. A lot of talent when it comes to computer game design etc. as well.

More Arab expos and similar events such emerge in general.

Jeddah to host the region’s first YouTube FanFest
Feb 28, 2017



JEDDAH — Jeddah will host the Arab world’s first YouTube FanFest featuring live shows by some of the region’s most influential YouTube creators on March 10.

YouTube FanFest Jedah, to be held at the Juhara Stadium at the King Abdullah Sports City, will have two shows, one dedicated to an only-female audience and the other will be attended by families and males. Organizers have also announced three sessions where ticket-holders will get a chance to meet the headlining YouTubers.

The lineup includes some of the region’s most influential creators such as Omar Hussein, Bader Saleh, Aljuhara Sajer, The Saudi Reporters, Moha, D7oomy 999, Omar Farooq, Hatoun Al Qadi, and many more. These creators are part of a growing YouTube community in Saudi Arabia where watchtime per capita is ranked the highest in the world.

This will be YouTube’s second event in Saudi Arabia after last years launch of Batala, a platform dedicated to highlighting the region’s female creators, in Riyadh.

For more information about the schedule and location of the event, please visit the YouTube FanFest Jeddah website.

http://saudigazette.com.sa/life/jeddah-host-regions-first-youtube-fanfest/


Digital technology and computing has changed the world and the Arab world should use this technology to our advantage especially as we have one of the youngest populations in the world.

Anyway I don't particularly care about this event or gaming but nevertheless I see this as encouraging news in the step towards necessary social and political reforms that hold the country and its people as hostage. So I see this in a bigger picture.
 
wow.. KSA is the last place I expected to have comic con... ha ha

Well, KSA has long had one of the biggest entertainment scenes in the Arab world and Saudi Arabians are well-known for their humor in the Arab world. Such views are mostly based on ignorance and solely based on politics and what is written in the media (Western one).

One thing is how people are and the entertainment scene another thing is the government (politics) allowing it to flourish publicly such as by arranging comic cons like this one which was quickly sold out.

Two very different things but I understand your reaction.
 
Well, KSA has long had one of the biggest entertainment scenes in the Arab world and Saudi Arabians are well-known for their humor in the Arab world. Such views are mostly based on ignorance and solely based on politics and what is written in the media (Western one).
biggest entertainment scene?.. any movie, music that you can post coming from ksa that is popular in ME?
I thought its mostly egypt and lebanon..
 
biggest entertainment scene?.. any movie, music that you can post coming from ksa that is popular in ME?
I thought its mostly egypt and lebanon..

I wrote, one of the biggest. Some of the most well-known comedies in the Arab world are Saudi Arabian. KSA controls/owns the biggest broadcasting companies in the Arab world and Middle East. One example is MBC (the largest of its kind).

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Middle_East_Broadcasting_Center

Saudi Arabian comedians, musicians and actors are mostly active outside of KSA (GCC, Lebanon, Egypt and West mainly) due to the current limitations inside the country.

Also there is a huge underground scene related to comedy and social media. Saudi Arabians for instance have a bigger "media penetration" on social media (Youtube, Twitter) per capita than anyone else.





http://www.globalmediainsight.com/blog/saudi-arabia-social-media-statistics/

Anyway I was especially talking about humor here and. It is well-known in the Arab world that Saudi Arabians are humorous people who often joke and who don't take themselves too seriously.
 
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I wrote, one of the biggest. Some of the most well-known comedies in the Arab world are Saudi Arabian. KSA controls/owns the biggest broadcasting companies in the Arab world and Middle East. One example is MBC (the largest of its kind).

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Middle_East_Broadcasting_Center

Saudi Arabian comedians, musicians and actors are mostly active outside of KSA (GCC, Lebanon, Egypt and West mainly) due to the current limitations inside the country.

Also there is a huge underground scene related to comedy and social media. Saudi Arabians for instance have a bigger "media penetration" on social media (Youtube, Twitter) per capita than anyone else.





http://www.globalmediainsight.com/blog/saudi-arabia-social-media-statistics/

Anyway I was especially talking about humor here and. It is well-known in the Arab world that Saudi Arabians are humorous people who often joke and who don't take themselves too seriously.
did not know about humor.. will watch the material albutairi is refereing to.. thanks... i have a feeling that its more underground than mainstream..
 
SAUDI ARABIA
YouTube makes Jeddah its 1st FanFest destination in Mideast
LULWA SHALHOUB | Published — Friday 10 March 2017

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From left to right, YouTubers Fahd Fal, Moha and Njoud receiving YouTube’s gold play button after their YouTube channels reached a million subscribers.

JEDDAH: YouTube has chosen Jeddah for its first ever FanFest event in the Middle East on Friday, as Saudi Arabia is home to the biggest number of YouTube consumers per capita in the world.
FanFest, which gathers local YouTube stars to perform live in their home countries, will have famous Saudi talents on stage at King Abdullah Sports City in Jeddah.
They include Omar Hussain, Badr Saleh, Hatoon Al-Qadhi, and siblings Nojoud and Moha Al-Shammari.
The siblings joined YouTube’s “millionaires club” after they each reached 1 million subscribers on YouTube channels, as did Fahd Sal.
YouTube on Thursday rewarded them with the “gold play button,” which they give YouTubers on such an occasion.
Nojoud has been vlogging (posting video blogs) on YouTube for only a year and a half, yet she has become one of the top 10 influencers on YouTube in the Middle East.
She appears in videos with her two brothers, whose nicknames are Moha and Lofan. They vlog (video blog) about their travels and daily life. She also has her own solo videos that target a female audience.
“What made me get to this stage (and win the gold play button) is my brothers’ support. They were always there to support me every step of the way,” she told Arab News on the sidelines of YouTube’s press conference in Jeddah on Thursday.
Watch time in Saudi Arabia grew by 50 percent last year, comprising a third of all watch time in the Arab world, said Diana Baddar, head of YouTube Partnerships for the Middle East and North Africa.
“We look at the content that’s being created out of Saudi. It’s very different, and not something you’d find on television,” Baddar told Arab News.
She said those who started more than five years ago created “a hotbed of creativity” for all those who have come up in the past five years.
She said Saleh became the first YouTube millionaire three years ago. “People are finding content that’s appealing to them, and we hope this continues,” Baddar said.
“By the end of the year, I foresee probably a doubling of millionaires from Saudi, and we’ll continue to support that.”
She added that YouTubing in Arabic is helping to build up “the repertoire of Arabic content. The fact that we’re exporting from Saudi is a phenomenon that I’m very proud of.”
The attractive local content, and the high usage of mobile phones in Saudi Arabia, are among the important factors making YouTube popular in the Kingdom.
Another factor is having a very young population “who are enthusiastic adapters of new technology and new culture,” said Stephen Nuttall, head of YouTube in Europe, the Middle East and Africa.
“With the ongoing adoption of modern technology here (in Saudi Arabia), with mobile networks getting ever faster, we’re going to see sustained growth in the future, and it’s really exciting,” he told Arab News.
Nuttall said authenticity and positive creative energy are the common thread among YouTube creators.
“Comedy in Saudi Arabia is very strong. The comedy videos work incredibly well. I think knowledge, the factual content, learning and inspiration (also) work incredibly well.”
Nuttall said the growth in viewership makes advertisers increasingly recognize YouTube as a place to build a brand.
This allows YouTube creators to “create more higher-end quality content as you go, so there will be more compelling content for people to watch.”
YouTube, which was established in 2005, is opening a space in Dubai that is the first in the Middle East, and the 11th in the world, for content creators in the region to learn, connect and create.

http://www.arabnews.com/node/1066096/saudi-arabia

YouTube Hosted Its First-Ever Middle Eastern ‘FanFest’ Event Today In Saudi Arabia
youtube-fanfest-saudi-arabia.jpg


YouTube FanFest, a live events initiative whereby influencers from across the globe have headlined performances in India, Canada, Korea, Brazil, and beyond, has officially made its first-ever stop in the Middle East.

Today, YouTube hosted a FanFest event in the Saudi Arabian port city of Jeddah, reports Arab News. The locale was reportedly chosen because Saudi Arabia boasts the most YouTube consumers per capita on earth. The Pepsi-sponsored event featured a female creator segment comprising beauty and comedy performances, meet-and-greets, and a family-centric musical variety show.

Creators in attendance included standup comedians Omar Hussain and Bader Saleh as well as sibling vloggers Njoud and Moha Al-Shammari. The Al-Shammaris and social issues vlogger Fahad Sal each received Gold Play Buttons at the event for surpassing 1 million subscribers.

YouTube’s head of partnerships for the Middle East and North Africa, Diana Baddar, told Arab News that watch-time in Saudi Arabia grew 50% in 2016, accounting for a third of all watch-time in the region. Saleh became the first creator to reach 1 million subscribers three years ago, and now his audience exceeds 3.2 million fans. Stephen Nuttall, YouTube’s senior head of Europe, the Middle East, and Africa, attributes Saudi Arabia’s astronomic growth to the popularity of mobile phones and a young population that’s eager to adapt to new technologies and cultural mediums.

In a bid to spotlight its Saudi Arabian creator community, YouTube shared a list of the most influential female personalities in November. The company is also set to open one of its YouTube Spaces in Dubai in the second quarter of this year — its first in the Middle East.

The next YouTube FanFest event will be held on March 24 in Mumbai. You can check out a livestream of the Jeddah event below:


http://www.tubefilter.com/2017/03/10/youtube-first-middle-eastern-fanfest-saudi-arabia/

 
Comic Con Arabia in KSA with some apparently famous comedians, actors etc. that I have no clue who are.

Some photos;

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SAUDI ARABIA
‘Game of Thrones’ star conquers Comic Con Arabia in Riyadh
Arab News | Published — Sunday 26 November 2017
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Pilou Asbæk

RIYADH: Pilou Asbæk, the Danish actor best known for his role as Euron Greyjoy in the TV series “Game of Thrones,” was a guest at Comic Con Arabia in Riyadh.
Arriving on Thursday, he was welcomed by rain. “That’s my fault,” he told Arab News, laughing. “I promise it will be 50 degrees again when I leave.”
Regarding Saudi Arabia, he said: “I heard it’s a very cultural and historical nation... I see it’s a country becoming more and more progressive.”
Asbæk, 35, enjoyed his time with fans on Friday. “They were so positive and sweet. I felt very welcomed and blessed to be here,” he said.
It is his second time in the region, having attended Comic Con Bahrain last month. “I’m trying to tour the whole Middle East,” he said.
“A convention like this (Comic Con Arabia) is so important to us artists because we get to meet our fans and tell them how much we appreciate what they do for our TV series,” he added.
“Without fans, there wouldn’t be any entertainment or a reason to keep making movies and TV shows.”

Picture gallery of the Comic Con Arabia

http://www.arabnews.com/node/1199226/saudi-arabia

High-profile guests join Comic Con tomorrow in Riyadh
Ruba Obaid | Published — Wednesday 22 November 2017
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JEDDAH: New celebrities and artists will join Comic Con Arabia event slated for Thursday in Riyadh, according to an official announcement on Tuesday.
The new guests include Keven Sussman, Kris Holen-Ried, Patricia Summerset and Samantha Inoue Harte.
Keven Sussman is an American artist known for his roles in The Big Bang Theory, Burn After Reading and A.I. Artificial intelligence.
Kris Holen-Ride, a Canadian actor known for his roles in Lost Girl, The Tudors, and Underworld: Awakening, is also going to join the fifth season of Vikings next month.
American-Canadian actress Patricia Summerset has given the voiceover for Princess Zelda from The Legend of Zelda. She will also act with Jennifer Lawrence in her new movie “Mother!”
Samantha Inoue Harte is a voiceover artist and founder of Saiko Studios. She is famous for giving the voiceover for Chocobo in Final Fantasy: Unlimited, and Kohran Li in Sakura Wars. She has also acted in a number of series like Sin City and No Pain, No Gain.
Comic Con Arabia is an annual family festival. It was first organized in Jeddah in February. It is brought to Riyadh by Events Oasis and Panache Middle East. The festival will run from Nov. 23 to Nov. 25.

Picture gallery of the Comic Con Arabia

http://www.arabnews.com/node/1197306/saudi-arabia

Comic Con in Riyadh a big draw
ARAB NEWS | Published — Saturday 25 November 2017
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American voice actor Kyle Hebert, right, addresses Comic Con fans at an event sponsored by Arab News in Riyadh.

RIYADH: The crowd seemed to have doubled overnight at the Comic Con Arabia event at Riyadh’s International Exhibition Center on Friday — no doubt drawn by the big-name stars.
On the second day of Comic Con Arabia, more and more Saudi male and female cosplays were seen among the crowds wearing their superhero-themed costumes, taking pictures, and enjoying an event that could not have been imagined a couple of years ago.
Saud, an 8-year-old who attends an international school in Riyadh, came to Comic Con with his sister Sarah, 11, and their father, who is a big fan of comics. “I’m thrilled to be here with my children to meet and take photographs with their favorite star Jason Momoa,” he said.
Anoud, whom Arab News met in a queue at one of the few food trucks, gave the event a rating of 7.5 out of 10, explaining how happy she was to attend. The limited number of food and drink outlets caused long queues but Comic Con fans didn’t seem to mind the wait.
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Arab News met Thomas DePetrillo while he was putting on his 9-foot Hulkbuster costume. DePetrillo was concerned about getting his handmade costume safely to Riyadh and the possibility of it being damaged during flight luggage transfer. Fortunately, Saudi Airlines had a direct flight from New York to Riyadh, and the suit made it in one piece.
Thomas praised the friendliness and hospitality of the locals, who he described as “one big family with the same reactions but different languages.”
Aseel Bitawi came all the way from Makkah to cosplay with his heavy costume of videogame character “The Keeper.”
While inside the main arena hundreds of fans gathered to take turns getting photographed with DePetrillo’s giant suit, while others sat in the company of speakers Kyle Henry Hebert, Jason Liebrecht and Patricia Summersett.
The first comic con, “New York Comic Con”, took place in 1964. Back then, comic cons were still limited both in scope and size. It was not until the seventies that comic cons increased dramatically. They spread to all the main American cities. In August 1970, San Diego Comic Con was held — the world’s largest and most important event of its kind. From that, the Comic Con brand expanded and became a real industry with serious and inspiring pioneers.
Comic cons are usually held in expo centers, hotels or even on college campuses where comic books’ fans gather for several days for a diversity of events and activities.
In the Arab world, the comics festivals were held later — from Cairo to Riyadh and Jeddah to Tripoli. Heroes traveled to meet their growing number of fans.
Although comic cons started out as non-profit events for comics’ fans, it later became an independent industry in which a lot of for-profit companies work, and comic cons were awarded important prizes given to the best shows or images.
According to entertainment experts, in the comic culture fans are heading toward off-site events, a natural result of the rapidly growing numbers of fans and the limited capacity to absorb these numbers in one place, especially with the growing amount of sub-genres and diversity of comic content.

Picture gallery of the Comic Con Arabia

http://www.arabnews.com/node/1198791/saudi-arabia

A large congregation of state-sponsored nerds as I see it but that aside, no biggie.
 
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