Otakon 2012: Panelist Interview with Charles Dunbar

There are many who have an interest in running a panel at cons but lack the expertise. I decided to locate arguably the best panelist in the nation and request an interview to gain insight. Charles Dunbar has been a prolific panelist at anime cons over several years. You can learn more about him at Study of Anime. My hope is for this interview to prove helpful to aspiring panelists as well as current ones.

The Paper: To reiterate, my aim for this interview is to gain a better understanding on creating, pitching and running a panel. To begin, how do you choose a topic?

Charles Dunbar: Picking a topic is the hardest part. How much material can you find? I believe in the saying that “you should present on what you know or something you don’t know but feel very passionately about”. Actually, inspiration hits when you’re not thinking about it. It happens to me when I am playing video games.

TP: Tell us about the research process.

CD: It’s just like a college paper. Goto the library. When I worked on my Death panel, I looked up everything “death + Japan”. This part is the most fun because I can learn about so many new things.

TP: Now that research is done, how do you prepare the presentation?

CD: When I first started, it was just massive walls of text. You tweak it over time. The second time around, you add new tricks, new jokes. While you want the slides to hit upon all the talking points, you don’t want to read the slide unless it’s a quote. Have something else to say that elaborates on the slide. Engage the audience.

TP: So how do you pitch the panel? Or do you pitch first? What’s the order?

CD: Pitch first. Pitch even before research. Have an abstract. That said, still do the research first. A well researched pitch will make an impression. Ichibancon has someone on staff who always ran this one panel. But when he reviewed my pitch, he saw that my presentation is potentially better and stepped aside. It’s gotten to the point where cons understand the work I put into research and they will actually proffer me ideas for panels.

TP: Ok, let’s talk about the presentation.

CD: Give the presentation in its entirety the first time just to test it. Rehearse it beforehand. I was in my hotel room rehearsing from midnight to 2am. Add humor. In fact, make a reference to the joke on the slide in parenthesis. It helps you and the audience finds it amusing. I am intimidated by a huge room like the Miyazaki panel but you could return to familiar ground. The seven episodes of Dragonball Z skit [at said panel] was something impromptu I did at another con. The crowd feedback was instantly positive so I kept it.

TP: Great. Tell us about panels with multiple speakers.

CD: It’s hard to match panelists. We need to feed off each other.  The key is to find a good place to jump into panel discussions. I used to be terrible at this. Everyone needs to be on the same page. Plan and prepare logistics beforehand. Review each other’s slides.

TP: What’s the most memorable experience? Worst?

CD: Worst is not getting any response from the audience. Hmmm. Best would have to be the time I was doing the Miyazaki panel on the second level at the hotel and the audience was really into it and cheering so loudly that it brought people up from downstairs curious about the commotion.

TP: Are there any improvements you like to see?

CD: This one time I had a panel scheduled at midnight. Why would anyone do that? It wasn’t an 18+ panel.

TP: I saw a tweet from Mike Toole a while back and was surprised at the lack of accommodations for panelists. Can you give some comments?

CD: Well, some cons treat panelists like just another attendee that happens to speak. Anime Boston and Otakon treat us very well. Panel Ops at Otakon has ice cream, cake… panels provide programming.

TP: Thank you for the interview.

CD: Thank you.

[We continued chatting after the interview and he had more to say.]

CD: There are some people who want to run a panel just so they can get into the con for free. They’re not serious about presenting and just want to hang out with their friends during the panel.

TP: A bad apple ruins it for everyone.

The Cat Returns is my favorite movie of all time so afterwards I took a playful jab at him about how he is wrong that that movie is not the best Ghibli film. He said it was grossly underrated.

Author: The Paper

The Paper <3s music.

2 thoughts on “Otakon 2012: Panelist Interview with Charles Dunbar

  1. Heh…I’ve done three panels before. One happened to involve a discussion about manga, which I ended up having a lot of fun doing because I managed to let the audience speak and since it was a small room and about 15 or so people there I didn’t have to worry too much about anyone taking over and letting people get across what they wanted to get across. The other was basically what I learned since starting OASG, which I got my points across but I may have been wordy when I did it a second time at a different convention, though cool story: the first panel I did at SpringFestNY with my blogging panel, after it was over an audience member approached me and we ended up talking for at least close to an hour. That was a moment that I’ll always remember.

    All that said, I think I could have used Charles’s advice on all of my panels, especially the part about the pitch, which I find pretty difficult! And yes, that means coming up with a panel idea is really tough for me as well. Also on the note about panelists trying to get in just for money: almost did it myself. But I didn’t have a single idea and felt uncomfortable trying to do a panel so I didn’t bother. Anyways, I shall keep this in interview in mind for future reference 🙂

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