The webcomics blog about webcomics

Mailbag Supplement Hot Off The Wires

I actually voiced “Hooray, ship!” when this came in a moment ago. From Phil Foglio:

Merriam-Webster, the dictionary people, periodically test out new slang to see if it should be added to the accepted compendium of the English language. As of today, they are floating, amongst others, the term ‘webcomic’. Exciting enough, but to illustrate everything a webcomic can be, they have foolishly chosen us.

No, really. Not sure how long it will be up, so check it out while you can.

Maaaaaiiiiiiillllll-bag!

Things happening in anticipation of MoCCA, so let’s dip into the mailbag, shall we?

  • Following up on the news of the Shuster Award nominations a few weeks back, one of the nominees dropped a note to say hi. Attila Adorjany was the only Webcomics/Bandes Dessinées Web nominee whose work I wasn’t familiar with, and his email prompted me to fix that. Whew — Metaphysical Neuroma is a mindbender; for once, having a website that’s a bit slow to load is an advantage, since it gives you more time to absorb everything. Weirdly enough, the tone reminds me of Elan’ Rodger Trinidad’s God™¹, but with a completely different direction to the story and wholly different art. Like I said, weird.
  • Speaking of new works reminding me of older works — both in artwork and (to a degree) subject matter, the brand new The Broken Light by Sabin Calvert is Meconisesque … it’s set in a particular historical context (the times in and around the [American] Civil War), and it’s got a half-engraving, half-woodcut feel to the visuals. Only four pages so far, but I’m intrigued.
  • Various work show-debuting at the 69th Regiment Armory in three days, including Sam Costello’s Split Lip Volume 2, David McGuire’s 12 Labors of Gastrophobia, Box Brown’s Everything Dies, and David Malki !’s third Wondermark collection will make its first East Coast appearance. Maybe I can even pick up my long pre-ordered copy of the Tigerbuttah Golden-style Book and (if the printer gets its shit together) Templar 4? Maybe!

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¹ Or, more fully, God™ © 2XX8 *** ***** ****** ******* Incorporated. All rights reserved. God and all related characters, titles, names and documents are trademarks of *** ***** ****** ******* Incorporated. No similarity between any of the names, characters, persons and/or institutions in this deity with those of any living or dead person or institutions is intended and any such similarity which may exist is purely coincidental.

Say The Word And I Appear

Today was the last installment of Little Dee; we’ve known this day was coming for months, but it still caught me by surprise. Ted, Blake, and Vachel were together for who knows how long before Dee came along nearly six years ago, but with Dee back home with her parents (we haven’t even seen her in the last 10 days), they’ve gone separate ways.

Vachel married Alida the elephant and Blake (gay-)married the stalker alligator; they’ve set up homes away from the cave. Ted, center of the strip, find himself alone in the cave and sets out for places and adventures unknown. Put the chairs up, turn out the lights, and take care. Oh, and be sure to check out Baldwin’s Spacetrawler, where stuff like this happens all the time; I think Vachel would fit right in.

  • O-kay! Let’s lighten up the mood a little, shall we? A couple of books that we’ve spoken of previously have news worth considering. Mercury, by Hope Larson, hits the street today, and Nothing Better vol 2 made it into Previews, which means it’s orderable by your favorite local comics shop. Give ’em some love.
  • Of the webcomickers I met in the past year, I think that Angela Melick is the one I feel the most … kinship? … with. Her sense of humor skews about the same way mine does, and she wears the ring, making us part of the same tribe (and she carries our banner proudly, sharing our culture with the world).

    And like all engineers, Melick knows that when something ain’t broke, sometimes the best thing you can do is break it, and put it back together different (and possibly better); thus, new website design. Please leave your bookmarks exactly as they are, since the address is the same.

  • And the word is: moustache!

Book!

Okay, it’s not BOAT!, but what is? There are some book pre-orders that you might want to take note of.

  • Little Dee is about to end (and you really must excuse me, as I appear to have somthing in my eye), and that means that the last Little Dee collection will shortly make it to press. Pre-orders on Little Dee Volume 4 are up, at the bargain price of $15 (+ $5 S/H to North America, $15 to the rest of the world), complete with Chris Baldwin’s autograph.
  • Erika Moen recently concluded DAR (but then stepping up to do a Penny Arcade guest strip, which wanged her site), which means it’s time for the last print collection of that hybrid of the personal and the public. DAR! A Super Girly Top Secret Comic Diary Volume Two (complete with tentacles!) contains the very earliest and very last strips from the webcomic, and is up for your pre-ordering pleasure for $15, or $20 with customization (plus the ubiquitous shipping and handling).
  • Last year at this time, Dylan Meconis was putting together the Bite Me! print collection; this year, it’s the first book of the companion story, Family Man. Chapters one and two are up for pre-order in a variety of packages, from book only, to book + additional swag, to book + swag + original artwork, to all of the above + a hand-tooled leather-bound copy of the book, all Bible-style. Prices start at $20 and go up from there (plus, yet again, shipping and/or handling).
  • No pre-order yet, but Scott C grabbed my interest this morning:

    I’m working on a zombie kids book. I forget if I mentioned it.

    I am so there, with or without a kid. Actually, screw the kids, they can’t have my copy.

  • Book-oriented, at the very least: the Hugo Awards recognize the very best in speculative fictions, and they continue to give respect to the webcomics community. Nominated for stories not yet collected in book form, both Girl Genius (Phil & Kaja Foglio) and Schlock Mercenary (Howard Tayler) have been honored in the category of Best Graphic Story (against some guys named “Gaiman” and “Willingham” … never heard of ’em).

    Given that the awards will be made at the World Science Fiction Convention (which this year will be in Melbourne), I expect that webcomics fans Down Under may have a rare chance to meet some creators on their home turf. Do you love Girl Genius and/or Schlock Mercenary? Drop a line to the appropriate person and let ’em know that since they’ll be on the right continent and all, a signing appearance would be awesome.

Almost Quieter Today Than Yesterday

The train was mostly empty and the sidewalks are pretty sparsely populated — hooray for people takin’ the day to celebrate a holiday. On the other hand, the internets are a bit emptier than usual as well, so we’ll have to content ourselves with a relatively sedate posting. I trust that all of you are outside enjoying the nice weather right now and wouldn’t notice a short update anyway.

  • After yesterday’s Nedroidariffic episode of Dinosaur Comics (now reverted to its normal state), Ryan North (who bestrides webcomics like unto a colossus) has gifted us with the ability to bring back Reginald & Beartato. Behold: &butiwouldratherbereading=. By applying characters to a mask (look closely for the white parts … that’s where art can be added) and overlaying it on any comic in his archive, North can provide us with a near-inifite variety of different characters. Would you rather be reading Nedroid? Achewood? Wigu? Gotcha covered, Bunky. My favorite involves monologues from T-Rexkcd, particularly when discussing nerdery at which I have expertise. As an added bonus, the Unixkcd interface from yesterday now has a permanent home.
  • In other news, we at Fleen undoubtedly missed plenty of April Foolery (including the silent-in-the-Owly-sense update to Unshelved), and completely neglected to take proper notice of the conclusion of the first Bad Machinëry story arc. The rivalry in mystery solving between Boys and Girls takes on a touching aspect as Shauna and Jack appear to be far less en-rivalled than previously known. That look on Shauna’s face in the last panel, the effort that Jack has to go to in order to compliment her … John Allison has perfectly captured that moment when flirting first starts to vaguely seem like a good idea, but you’re not quite sure why. The next week of downtime prior to the start of the next story will be too long.
  • David Morgan-Mar (PhD, LEGO®™©etc is justly famous for his quiet, patient way with supplementary material over at Irregular Webcomic, and never have I seen so much as an angry word from his hand. Yet today he is a seething cauldron of primal rage/deathlust, but it’s directed at those responsible for Monopoly, so that’s all right. If you want to read a very good explanation for why you’ve always hated playing that friggin’ “game”, click away (and make sure you have the annotations turned on).
  • Upcoming: Wondercon is kicking off pretty much as we speak, MoCCA hits next weekend (curiously, no mention of press access ever showed up on their website, which was late to update … guess I’ll pay the $15), and the New York iteration of Drink & Draw Like A Lady hits next Friday evening in Chelsea. And best of all, it’s official: Webcomics Weekend (the famous original, accept-no-substitutes fun times) has announced for November 6 & 7. Details on the last forthcoming, and I’ll see you at at least two of those.

“ ”

It’s kinda quiet today; webcomics are normally full of dudes and ladies with opinions and words and everything, and today — quiet. In the wilds of Colorado, Boxhead breaks out the semaphore flags. In a San Francisco toy store, a pantomime takes place, exeunt lovers. In Anytown USA (although one that tends not to get snow — draw your own conclusions), taxes provoke silent desperation and release for one family, while workplace frustrations drive a man to the only place he can have peace and quiet (although it’s been pretty quiet for him all week).

Ninjas always strike silently (whether in the Great White North, or plummeting over Western Maryland), so I’m not sure that counts, but the noisiest two dudes geeking out over a unicorn in silence? That’s definitely weird (although they appear to have made up for it some 65,000,000 years in the past). A bit more recently (at least in geological terms), a man quietly plumbs the depths of filthy desires, and Jeph Jacques provides an unusually quiet episode of Magical Love Gentlemen — usually, it’s pretty shouty until all de plookin’ ‘n thrashin’ be done wif.

On the far end of the spectrum, Jess Fink’s Chester 5000 XYV has gotten loud, gender-swapped, and marginally less SFW than it normally is, but hey — eight page update. Latin Heartthrob Aaron Diaz has found that existentialist films can be made more quickly than the insanely detailed comics he normally does. Meanwhile, messers McGuire, Green, and Lesnick have joined forces to create comics that can never be read on an iPad even as xkcd goes old-school … hint: “xyzzy” does nothing.

April Foolery has a long history in webomics, but even today there’s some legit stuff happening:

Knuckleheads Since Small Times

Work crisis, things are on fire (only half-metaphorically). Briefly:

Bandland

When last we left our intrepid heroes, they were wandering the resplendent paradise that was Penny Arcade Expo East 2010; we join their adventure now in progress…

  • PAX East wasn’t all games and Enforcers — there were other creatives there, and they were clustered at two rows of tables outside the main theater space. This region was known as Bandland due to the fact most of them were musicians, but there were comicky types there as well; the previously mentioned Kris Straub, when not ambassading, plied his wares (including the too-awesome How The Jinxlets Saved The Space Zoo coloring book) alongside Blam-buddy Scott Kurtz.

    The latter had an Q&A panel on Saturday night that went an amazing three hours (helped along by a combination of in-the-palm-of-his-hand audience and sophisticated adult crunkifiers), and was hailed by all attendees as pants-wettingly funny (I, uh, was at the concert, so my pants stayed dry). The former joined the latter in a Sunday-morning panel devoted to Blamification that involved, in no particular order, time travel, frontier medicine, adultery, and stellar cartography; with any luck, the audio track recording will show up in May’s Blamimation. Hanging with them at most points of the weekend was the frighteningly young (and even more fighteningly talented) Mary “Cube Watermelon” Cagle, former Kurtz intern and current protégé. Rumor from an Enforcer was that a cosplayer was dressed as Cagle’s character Blitz, but alas confirmation remains elusive.

  • Staked out next to Straub & Kurtz was Mr Bill Amend, 22 year vet of the newspaper comic strip wars, and guy out in front of the curve in understanding how web delivery works. Odds are, if newspapers died tomorrow, Amend would be able to translate his audience into a revenue-generation source more easily than just about any other syndicate creator (because, let’s face it, does anybody who actually seeks out Mary Worth have the drive and desire to seek her out on the wilds of the internet?) (besides Josh Fruhlinger). Amend managed to get in some commentary webcomickry during the Q&A portion of his Saturday morning session; speaking on the differences between print and web strips, Amend said:

    We have a whole lot more in common than any differences. I don’t quite understand when some of my print colleagues look down at webcomics. I also don’t understand when webcomics creators say print comics suck.

    Coincidentally, there was a nice, funny bit in Amend’s talk about getting the word “sucks” past newspaper editors. On the general topic of working in content that either syndicate or features-page editors might not approve of (and that includes heavily nerd-oriented references), Amend notes:

    One of the things I like about newspapers is I have a broad audience, and I can do these geeky things and be the one person that introduces [my readers] to it.

    Just in case you were wondering how an All Your Base or detailed Lord of the Rings quotation got into mainstream newspapers, it’s because nerddom has one of its own on the inside. As an aside, I’d love to include links to those very funny strips, but Amend’s webcomic-friendly tendencies haven’t yet prevailed on his syndicate sufficiently to get unlocked, searchable archives, dammit.

  • Not exhibiting, but present for various parts of the weekend (and always delightful to interact with) were Brad Guigar, Jeff Rowland & Holly Post, Randall Munroe, and Rosemary Mosco.
  • The remainder of Bandland was filled out with musicians who, while not webcomickers, mostly work from the same place — developing audiences via the internet, giving away a lot of content for free or nominal amounts, and relying on that personal relationship to sustain a livelihood. I have no idea to what extent Paul and/or Storm can draw, but who cares? Nun Fight hooked me the first time I heard it on The Sound of Young America, and now I am compelled to seek out out more of their work and give them money. It’s webcomics for my ears.
  • In other news, Rebecca Clements has a new Secret Mystery Diary; don’t let her catch you reading it!
  • In other other news, all the cool kids will be at Wondercon in San Francisco this weekend; tell them I said “hi”.

Being A History Of A Nerd Gathering

Let’s get one thing clear about PAX East 2010 and me — going in, I knew to a certain extent that this event isn’t for me. I’m not part of the gamer tribe by nature; I haven’t owned a console since my siblings and I were joint owners of an Atari 2600. Sure, I’ve logged respectable hours in the Civilization series and have almost finished Osmos, but I have (gasp, horror) never played any kind of musical hero game, any MMPORG, and am only barely aware of the terms “aggro” and “mobs”. Nevertheless, the staff and attendees of PAX East seemingly went out of their way to make me feel at home; this event was a culture made physical, one where anybody is welcome to plant stakes and live, or just visit for as long as they like.

The Spine of PAX

Pick a random direction while at PAX East, and look down it. Three, four, five … you’re counting the number of Enforcers, volunteer staffers that keep things running smoothly. More than that, they are the finest group of con volunteers I have ever encountered, and a standard to which every other show should aspire. I asked nearly every one I encountered How long have you been Enforcing, and got an even split between This is my first time and Oh, I started at PAX the {second|third|fourth} year and just kept with it. Once an Enforcer, it seems, always an Enforcer.

Talking on this point with a young lady named (per her badge) Jorunn, she kept coming back to what she described as A year-round brother- and sisterhood; brilliantly, crucially, the PAX coordinators have made Enforcing not something that you attend a couple of volunteer meetings and then do for a weekend — it’s a self-sustaining community, with the convention duty only being the part most visible to civilians.

This permanent sense of family (there were about 400 Enforcers on duty for the weekend) has resulted in the best, most effective con volunteer staff I’ve ever seen. We’ve all seen con volunteers who’ve eventually come to the conclusion that they’re the most important person on the floor, and act like it … they throw their weight around, the attendees come to resent them, the poisonous attitudes become almost visible. Enforcers treat attendees Like you’re guests in my house, and I want everybody to have a good time. That’s my job.

That sense of hospitality comes across, and from making announcements that capacity on a session had been reached to line-wrangling, or even apologizing for disorganization, the attitude of the Enforcers made it only right for the attendees to respond like gracious guests who don’t want to put their hosts out. The organizers past (Amber Fechko) and present (Jeff Kalles, Kristen Linsday, Robert Khoo, Lance Fensterman from Reed Exhibitions) were unanimous in their praise for the Enforcers, and every one that I met (Haikon, Gwyn, Mojo, and dozens more) merited that praise.

Ambassador? I Hardly Know Her!

There were a lot of media at PAX East — a lot a lot. Joshua Price, wrangler of we ink- and pixel-stained wretches, put our count around 680 (meaning if you took that random look in any direction, there would be about 1.5 yellow MEDIA badges for every Enforcer, but we thankfully don’t stand out). Just about every single one of them (particularly those that don’t cover the corners of the culture that PAX most thoroughly intersects) wanted face time with The Big Names (Gabe, Tycho, Wil, JoCo, and suchlike), who naturally cannot be all places at all times.

For such circumstances, there was an on-call Media Ambassador, a handsome man named Kris Straub. In between interacting with his own fans, Straub was dashing off to answer questions, do on-camera interviews, and in his words, Be Mike and Jerry when they can’t be there. Given that local cable reporters and the Boston Globe didn’t run vicious distortions about all the freaks who like videogames, it would appear that his ambassading was pretty successful.

Run, Coward!

Games were everywhere, as one might expect. But for those of us of a certain age, the greatest corner of PAX East might have been the classic arcade set up in a room on the third floor — classic arcade machines, lovingly restored and set for permanent free play. I’m proud to report that Sinistar kicked my ass just as thoroughly as when I was 12, and that Dragon’s Lair remained as impenetrably frustrating to me as the day I resolved that dropping a quarter every 20 seconds wasn’t a good use of my allowance. As one person observing the play remarked, it really is like navigating a DVD for entertainment.

One Sharp-Dressed Motherscratcher

Of course, not all could run perfectly; the greatest challenge to the show was the venue itself. The Hynes Convention Center is laid out like a concert hall, with sweeping hallways and high ceilings more suited to a stately procession of medium-sized crowds, rather than a press of people trying to get into the main hall via the same physical space as tables occupied by MC Frontalot, JoCo, Paul and Storm, Scott Kurtz, and Wil Wheaton have fans lined up around corners and through various chokepoints.

The space just didn’t work for the size and kind of crowd that was present, and the fact that it didn’t end up in stampedes and riots comes back to the dedication of Enforcers and the willingness of the crowds to work with them. Fortunately, the three-year deal between PAX and Boston permits the show to shift to the much larger Boston Convention Center, which is laid out in the more traditional big honkin’ room with long straight hallways model, which should make logistics easier.

But no matter how well prepared, any event that large has the potential to turn to disaster in a moment, and on top of it were the Access All Areas staff, with the biggest problems no doubt finding their way back to Penny Arcade President of Business Development Robert Khoo. Anybody that’s seen the Penny Arcade TV series knows what Khoo brings to the table and what he expects from those that work for him.

Speaking with Amber Fechko (who ran the first three iterations of PAX), was given a perfect example of what a difficult undertaking such a large show is to run smoothly: Fechko left Penny Arcade and is now in the first year of a combined MD/PhD program. As some of you may know, I went to nerd school and have multiple personal acquaintances who breezed through engineering programs only to be brought up short by med school; not one of them was foolish enough to try to become a medical doctor at the same time as getting a PhD in neuroscience.

Guys, Amber spends her time doing brain surgery on moths so she can remotely direct their flight with a wireless XBox controller. To get them to survive the surgery, she puts them in a controlled-stimulus environment to make them think that they haven’t become cyborgs. She has invented The Moth Matrix in her first year.

This work (which to my eye may lead some day to Nobel Prizes) she charitably allows is somewhat harder than working for Khoo at Penny Arcade.

Unhurried, unflabble, wearing an impeccably-tailored double-vented suit, Khoo floated from potential crisis to potential crisis, always apologizing for having to leave our conversation. Given the level of work, skill, and dedication that he is able to muster from his people, we should all be grateful that the empire he has set out to build occupies a niche of popular culture and its devotees. Were he to set his sights on the geopolitical situation, we’re talking supervillian-grade abilities. I exaggerate somewhat.

There Were Also Webcomics

But this has gone on long enough, so we’ll get to those tomorrow. In the meantime, check out the relaunched Wigu, because it kicks ass.

Boston, Ho

Gotta hit the road, this is gonna be quick:

  • Interview with Danielle Corsetto from Stumpton Trade Review conducted during the recently-concluded Emerald City con.
  • MoCCA‘s education series continues, and the sessions of interest to anybody doing any kind of comics, anywhere, ever, have got to be four Tuesdays in April and May on anatomy with R Sikoryak and Kriota Willberg:

    Through PowerPoint presentations, in-class exercises, and at-home assignments, students will learn to see and draw the structures and tissues that give the body shape and character. Willberg will—literally!—draw on live models to trace muscle groups and bony landmarks. Sikoryak will demonstrate the application of anatomical understanding to any cartooning style. Students will practice drawing from live models in class and learn to apply the lessons to their own characters.

    Details at the MoCCA site; $275 tuition, $250 for members.

  • On ideas, scarcity and plenitude: two viewpoints, from Howard Tayler and Olaf Moriarty Solstrand. Tayler’s taking exception to the most common question that creative types get, Where do you get your ideas? and giving it a right kicking. Solstrand (webmaster of the largest webcartooning network in Norway and writer of Donald Duck comics, which makes him one of the biggest deals in comics everywhere on this planet except America) has set himself the project of:

    [A] brain exercise to keep the blog updated and also to keep myself on the toes at all times: I’m trying to come up with one hundred comic ideas in one hundred days.

    For the first six days, I’ve succeeded pretty well: One idea a day, and I already have the next three ideas planned in advance. The level of ideas we’re talking about ranges from simple plot ideas to ideas on completely different ways to make comics. If everything goes well, I’ll publish idea #100 June 24 this year.

    Of course, the more people actually looking over my shoulder and expecting me to update something, the bigger is the chance I’ll actually succeed.

    I must confess, I hadn’t heard of Solstrand’s blog (and since I live in America where Donald Duck comics aren’t so common), nor was I familiar with his comics work. But since he wrote me a few days ago, I’ve been perusing his blog and enjoying the hell out of myself. Start reading, start learning, and take some inspiration.