Spike and Matt’s Sparkneedle, reviewed by Smuga

Nudity.

It’s one of the big no-nos of family entertainment.

In American entertainment, no one is ever just naked. They’re having sex, or implying that they would like to be having sex, or in the shower while a homicidal killer sneaks up on them, or trying to catch the mischievous dog who’s scampering away with their underwear. The revealing of the butt crack, the nipple, or the genitals serves a purpose, be it to titillate, to shock, to lampoon, or to get you to pull out your credit card. It’s never just there.

Unless it’s in an art museum, or in a National Geographic Magazine , or in a webcomic called Sparkneedle. Continue Reading

Elliott Garbauskas’ Buttercup Festival, reviewed by Shaenon K. Garrity

As the daily newspaper page becomes an increasingly boring place, original and experimental comic strips have moved to two frontiers: the World Wide Web and the free weeklies. Some occupy both spaces at once. So it is with Elliott G. Garbauskas’ Buttercup Festival, a sweetly sardonic strip that appears in a handful of weekly newspapers and on its own website, where it has attracted a cult following. Continue Reading