Tuesday Mean Random Stories About Webcomics… Doesn’t It?

INTERVIEWS
Wizard is doing webcomic stuff again – an interview with Tom Siddell of Gunnerkrigg Court, John Allison of Scary Go Round, a roundtable with a pretty cool cast of creators (from ComicCon).

Laura Hudson who works for the magazine Comic Foundry has a blog with some good webcomic-related posts.  Most recently she interviewed Leigh Walton of Top Shelf 2.0, and Rantz Hosely of the Long Box Project.

CONVENTIONS

Ted the Robot asks how many books he should bring to this year's SPX.  Good question — surely there's some collective common sense advice out there on this?

STRETCHING COMICS?
Michael Jantze of the webcomic The Norm tries creating an "audio comic".  I guess it's for people too lazy to read the words themselves?

GREATER F-WAD THEORY OF THE INTERNET
So the Daily Cartoonists hits a civility crisis.  I can relate having had it rip through Comixpedia/ComixTalk in earlier years.  It's hard to come up with "rules" for conversation but you can kind of tell when a place is working and when it's starting to deteriorate.  The sad thing is it really always seems to be a small number of people who either like to pretend to be or probably really are borderline psychotic that cause the most damage to a site.  </soapbox>

AROUND THE WORLD IN 80 BLOGS
Rob Balder's Partially Clips gets a shout out from blogger and biologist PZ Myers.

This Week in Webcomics is a pretty cool new blog you might want to bookmark.

Brandon J. Carr has a new project with David These Stories Are True – check it out.

I love John Allison's take on Batman.

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PAX Arcadia

What is this – the fifth annual PAX (Penny Arcade Expo)?  It seems like just yesterday that Mike and Jerry hung out with a few fans at a game center (that was the year before the first PAX) and now they’re bigger than John Lennon!

The local newsprint has a pretty good feature story on the amazing success story that is Penny Arcade Inc:

PAX, or Penny Arcade Expo, taking place Aug. 29-31 at the Washington Convention Center in Seattle, is the largest video-game conference, rivaling others like E3 and earning the nickname the "Woodstock for gamers." Microsoft, Electronic Arts, Blizzard and Nintendo will be exhibitors there.

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New News at ComicMix

I met Rick Marshall, the former news editor at ComicMix this month and he’s a heck of a nice guy and really smart as well.  So after he and ComicMix parted ways, anyone taking up the reins there has a pretty big set of shoes to fill.  They’ve hired Bob Greenberg for the taskHe worked at DC up until a couple years ago and has apparently been contributing stories to ComicMix previously.

I don’t want to prejudge things but I do hope he continues to try to include news about independent creators and the digital side of comics in the mix over there.

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Rolling Monday Update

INTERVIEWS
Some new interviews right here at COMIXTALK – with Barry T Smith of Inktank, Clint Hollingsworth of The Wandering Ones and Peter Spicer of WordOwl

Elsewhere, Jennifer Contino talks to Danielle Corsetto of Girls With Slingshots, and Patrick Montero talks to Scott McCloud of ZOT! (h/t to Journalista!).

DEAD TREES
Sunday’s Washington Post had a good article on the graphic novel publishing boom written by Bob Thompson (who is self-described in the article as "Prose Guy" so you know a bit about where he’s coming from).  Be sure to check out the comics that are part of the otherwise text story. 

PORTRAITS OF CREATORS
Photographer Seth Kushner has been taking portraits of the many great NYC-based graphic novelists.  There are some wonderful photos in this series and it’s just kind of cool to put a face to the name for many of these creators.

COPYRIGHT
This is interesting — according to this story by Joseph Menn, Disney may NOT have the rights to the very earliest versions of Mickey Mouse.

Help Out Kazu

Kazu Kibuishi is racing to finish his graphic novel (which one!?!) and is asking for volunteers to help him with the flatting (and perhaps painting) of the pages.  My lead assistant, Alan Beadle, will still be joining me on this journey, as will Amy, Shadi, and Tim, but we’ll definitely need some more brave souls to join the party.  If you are interested, send an email to kazu(at)boltcity.com with some examples of your work. 

AROUND THE WORLD IN 80 BLOGS
Redrawing pages of the Fantastic Four?  James Kochalka’s take here; Ron Rege’s page here.

The LA Times science fiction blog gives some love to the webcomics collective ACT-I-VATE.

I’ve probably linked to it before but it’s still useful — 50 Tools and Resources to Start A Webcomic.

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Still Wandering: An interview with Clint Hollingsworth

Clint Hollingsworth creates the adventure saga, The Wandering Ones, which has been on Keenspot for its entire existence. The comic is set in the future after a manmade disaster leaves most of the world's population dead.  With more than 8 years of updates it's pretty epic in scale now. I caught up with Hollingsworth about still working on the strip, sticking with Keenspot and what's next.

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Return to the Angst: An Interview with Inktank’s Barry T. Smith

In the early half of the "naughts" Barry T. Smith appeared in webcomics with Angst Technology, a funny webcomic about a small videogame company.  He also created a webcomic about paintball called Weakend Warriors and one about a comic book shop called Sorry, We're Open.  All were pretty solid efforts and he certainly had a decent-sized audience for the time (for example, Angst Technology showed up at #9 on the initial "Most Read" list we did in 2003). He took a pretty big break from comics and only recently returned with his comic called InkTank.  I've been enjoying the new comic and was happy to get a chance to interview Smith about his return.

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How Many Links Does It Take To Get To The Center of A Webcomic?

I noticed this month that the webcomic Ménage à 3 had posted a note that it’s archives were now searchable by dialogue and was surprised to see a link not to the OhNoRobot service but one I had not heard of before… WordOwl.  WordOwl was created by Peter Spicer earlier this year and it compiles transcripts and provides a searchable index for several webcomics (11 at present).

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Vacation Week!

I am on vacation next week and more than likely I’ll be bottlenecking up any new "official" content on the site until August 25th.  As always, however check out the stream of all your talk posts (click on the talk post tab on the right hand column) and go nuts in the forums.

I’ll be off making some sandcomics on the beach.  Maybe an infinite sandcomic…  I might even try to do a multimedia one with solids and liquids all mixed up in a 3D castle shape…

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How To Draw Stupid — Kyle Baker’s Entertaining Book on Cartooning

How to Draw Stupid and Other Essentials of Cartooning by Kyle Baker is one of the more entertaining how-to books I’ve read this summer.  The somewhat thin volume (clocking in at 111 pages) is really well written — if a little thin on practical tips and guides to actual cartooning techniques.  I mean well written in the sense that it’s an enjoyable read, even if you don’t learn a thing from it.  Baker is just funny, especially in his cartooning, but even in the straight-ahead text portions of the book.

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This Day in ComixTalk (August 15th)

2007

Creator and entrepreneur Tim Demeter guest blogged at ComixTalk with a series called "It’s Business Time" (links to part one, two and three)

The most popular pages at the Comixpedia encyclopedia are Girly, Penny Arcade, Cyanide and Happiness, Melonpool, and PowerPuff Girls Doujinshi.

2006

As Scott Kurtz debuted a new site design for PvP, I wrote asking whether webcomic websites be an artistic extension of the comic, essentially extending the look and feel of the comic, or is that not that important?

2005

Ryan Estrada reaches the 168 hour mark in the Ironbutt comic making event.  In related endurance news, we reported on another entrant dropping out of the Daily Grind contest.

Ali Graham released a print collection of his first webcomic Housd.

2004

Alexander Danner wrote about how to promote your webcomic by not promoting your webcomic.

A group of creators banded together to form Found Hat Press.

2003

Warren Ellis reviewed the very first print collection of David Rees’ clip art comic Get Your War On!

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