And Guest Starring Ted Rall as the “Get Off My Lawn” Guy

I actually like Ted Rall’s cartooning – don’t always agree with him but to me if you’re going to put yourself out there as an editorial cartoonist it helps to actually editorialize in the cartoon.  Rall does that fearlessly.

But apparently Rall seems to think the only way to success in comics is through the narrow prism of his own experiences.  He can’t seem to stand thinking about any other avenue to a sustainable career in comics despite his clear understanding that the newspaper biz is dying and killing off editorial (and all) comics in the newspaper even faster.  There’s a somewhat over-long interview between Ted Rall and Rall protege Matt Bors in the recent issue of TCJ (available online now) where Rall just can’t leave "webcomics" alone:

How can we be "alternative"? There are more political cartoons drawn and published in "alternative" styles — in altweeklies — than there are in dailies. Indeed, the only thing more annoying than the lame posturing of a few ridiculous tools like Scott Kurtz (PVP) and the Penny Arcade guys (who apparently have Roman orgies every time a staff editorial cartoonist loses his job and winds up unemployed) is the term "webcartoonist." What the fuck does that mean? Oh, I know: Cartoonists who post their stuff online for free and sell visitors to their websites merchandise like T-shirts and books. And who attend lots of comics conventions. Well, gee, what cartoonist doesn’t do that? We all do. We all have been. Everyone is a webcartoonist now.

What’s disconcerting beyond the ridiculous Amway-like rhetoric ("You too can make BIG CASH MONEY making comics FROM HOME!") is that free has become a religion for the e-vangelists. They give cartoons away for free that they could sell — simply by asking! You and I were on a group phone chat a while back with webcartoonists like Kurtz and someone — I forget who — said he wouldn’t even know how to ask for money. I said: "You just ask, ‘Do you have a budget for this?’" It really is that simple. Not only are these guys driving down the prices for all of us who are trying to make a living, they’re doing the same thing editorial cartoonists are doing by lowering the quality. Look at webcartoons like PVP and Penny Arcade, by all accounts the most successful webcomics around. Kurtz tried to give PVP away for free to newspapers a while back and there were no takers. Why? Because it’s terrible. Incompetently written. Awful characterization. Plastic, cold artwork. Syndication 1.0 had flaws. It kept out good, daring work. But now that there’s no gatekeeper, all the shit is everywhere. It used to be off the page. Now it’s damned near impossible for readers to distinguish what’s good because it’s surrounded by crap. That’s not good for the profession. A terrible mainstream comic like Tumbleweeds had a base level of competence. Only a half-dozen webcomics, like Diesel Sweeties, Cat and Girl, etc. do.

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Another Pitch for the Community Calendar for Comics

I’m not making a huge push really for this (yet) but I’ll keep dropping a note here and there for it.  I’ve set up a GOOGLE calendar for the sole purpose of adding comics events to it.  Conventions, book signings, local meetups — stuff ComixTalk readers would certainly be interested in.  You can see it on the website here; but even better you can add it to your own Google Calendar or subscribe to its RSS feed.  I’m not sure what the best widget for Wordpress is for displaying it on a Wordpress site (which powers a lot of comics sites these days) — let us know!

Beyond being easy to use and display — it’s easy to collaborate on — I’m looking for more folks to help add events and maintain this calendar.  Many hands make light work, right?  Let me know if you have events to add to the calendar or better yet, if you’re interested in joining up as a co-maintainer of it.  Email (xerexes AT gmail.com) or Tweet (xerexes) me.

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Lulus of the Year: 2009

Congrats to all of the winners of this year’s Lulu Awards

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Friday Hype: The Invisible Hair Suit

Edgar McHerly’s The Invisible Hairsuit at first strikes you a bit like the late lamented Perry Bible Fellowship but it really only has one art style (PBF skipped styles likes it was going out of style) and although it has its very dark and funny moments, it also has some just plain dark moments too.  Still when your first impression of a comic is "this feels a bit like PBF" that’s a good start.  

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Webcomic From Slovenia

Well it’s not everyday I get a press release from Slovenia:

Just as a press-release, we would like to inform all comic and webcomic oriented media that the first online weekly comic from tiny Slovenia, called Paradise Misplaced, recently hit the web.

Created by small-time hermit and self-proclaimed holy man Anonymus Gosh, it recounts the goings on in Eden at the beginning of time with a fresh sin being propagated by a different animal every week.  Adam, Eve, God and the gang have not only the old-fashioned snake-and-apple to fear but also monkeys selling tropical fruit, sloths offering comfy beds and bunnies plugging the playboy lifestyle. Read it (and even better, review it publicly in for many readers) every Sunday at www.paradisemisplaced.si

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Weekend Hype: Herman the Manatee

Herman the Manatee Gets Hit by a Boat is like those Peanuts strips with Charlie Brown, the football and Lucy except they're underwater, Charlie Brown is a manatee, Lucy is a boat and there is no football!  Despite the repetition of the same basic joke (how many times can Herman the Manatee hit his head on a boat?) creator Jason Viola does a pretty good job of keeping it funny. The mini is a collection from the ongoing webcomic version of Herman the Manatee.  There's also a second mini out called Herman the Manatee Fails Again but for some reason I didn't pick it up (maybe Jason was already out of it when I walked by his table at SPX).

Herman has been online for two years now – Viola updates every Wednesday.  It's surprisingly familar to reading Peanuts, the laughs are low-key and mixed with shades of doubt and angst.  The last little storyline of Herman following his friend Knuckles the Narwhal to Manartica is a pretty good snapshot of the comic's style.

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Weekend Hype: Jeff Gibbons

I picked up Jeff Gibbons’ mini comic Fading Memories #1: Caricatures at SPX this year.  A short little tale about the time he had to draw caricatures of the cast of his highschool play.  To be honest, there’s nothing actually all that exciting or moving about this comic to someone who wasn’t there, but it’s a story competently told (and that’s nothing to discount).  So I checked out his website (marketing 101 — URL on the mini? check!) an infrequently updated journal comic called Pretty Jeff.  It had a few moments (like this one and this one), but mostly it’s pretty rough.

Sometimes life isn’t all that interesting — there are reasons for fiction and crafting a tale that’s compelling is sometimes easier to do when you’re not bound by the constraints of your memory of how things actually were.  Don’t take this short blurb the wrong way (especially you Jeff if you ever read this) – I hope Gibbons keeps at it, maybe pushes himself to tell another complete story and take some liberties to make it truly compelling reading.

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Whatevah It’s Friday

TOOLS
Scott McCloud has a post (and comment thread) on the ratio of comic to controls (navigatin') to crap (everything else) on the screen.  

BOOKS
An interview with Randall Munroe on the unusual publishing strategy for his first book, xkcd, Volume 0.

JUSTIFY MY HYPE

Rebecca Dart illustrates an old murder ballad.  Everyone is linking to this today and with good reason – Dart's imagination and the linework for the comic are both fantastic.

Josh Lesnick gives us an advance preview of next week's FWEEN headlines.

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