The webcomics blog about webcomics

Hey Kate Beaton Is It True That You Should Totally Take Over That Strip Or What?

For all who wonder what the last two years of For Better or For Worse have been like, Our Friend From Canada has distilled them down to their barest essence. The only question is, who does a better crazy staring Ellie? Beaton or David Willis?

And oh man I totally hope this is for reals. It’s been established that Jess has mysterious powers over dessert, so there’s no reason for me to disbelieve it.

Okay, nearing a fix on Lappy McBluescreen. Hopefully more on the content tomorrow.

Speed Typing

Hooray, lappy problems, averaging 30 – 35 minutes between bluescreens, so this is gonna be fast.

Unshelved‘s new book, Frequently Asked Questions, arrived in the mail yesterday. Very amusing, although I can’t in good consicence give it a proper review since Gene & Bill got me to contribute some content to their reprinting of the famed Coffee Cup Lid Challenge of Aught Seven. It was a great deal of fun working with the guys, and I got to use the words “Proustian madeleine” in reference to this comic strip. Now you’ll just have to go buy the book to see what the fuss is about.

Speaking of fuss, Webcomics Iron Man Ryan Estrada made it to the top of Mount Kilimanjaro with a medium-high amount of it sometime last week. Altitude sickness is nothing to joke about, but I have to confess that reading Ryan’s account of barfing every 30 yards or so elicited equal amounts of sympathy and mild amusement (in a schadenfreudistic fit of God I’m glad that wasn’t me). On the other hand, isn’t Iron Man supposed to be rich? Apparently, Estrada’s bank didn’t get the memo:

Both the day before I left up Kilimanjaro, and the day I got back, I spent a whole day walking between ATMs trying to find one that worked. But each time, it would say “cannot contact your bank” or “timed out”.

Guess who just found out that every single time he tried an ATM, it withdrew a couple hundred bucks from his account, but didn’t give him cash???

Guess who just lost the last thousand bucks he had on faulty bank machines?

IT’S ME!

Faulty, or a massive conspiracy against the wide-ranging Ryan? You decide, and maybe PayPal him a few bucks?

Quiet Times

Maybe it’s just because I’m finishing up the copy of Set It To Awesome I picked up at MoCCA (short version: it rules; slightly longer version: although the smallish size makes some details hard to pick out, it rules; definitive version: although the smallish size makes some details hard to pick out, it rules and I can’t wait for the Reprographics2 volume and not just ’cause I’ll be in it), I’ve been poking around photocomics for a bit.

Lots of familiar ones out there (did you catch Rick Marshall’s interview last week with Emily Horne & Joey Comeau?) and at least one new one. Ben Heaton, one of the twisted geniuses behind Terror Island (two years old today, as it turns out) and The Ham Project is now running a second photo comic (or fumetto if you wanna be all art-school about it): Request Comics.

Pretty simple: you email the request, Heaton finds a way to photograph it, hilarity ensues. If nothing else, you’ll never look at a game of Rock-Paper-Scissors again. Just try your fancy kiddie-mind-control-tricks on an angry boar, Howard Tayler!

Clearing The Mailbag

We come to bury Hookie Dookie Panic and Lancaster: The Ghost Detective. After three and four years, respectively, and more than 800 comics between the two of them, the strips have come to an end. Insert something classy here about Princes and Flights of Angels.

Okay, how about various good newses?

  • Punch an’ Pie? 200 strips!
  • Red String at Dark Horse? Volume 3!
  • Wireheads? More than 2 years!
  • New collective? Dumm Comics, featuring a mess o’ TV animators! It’s a little different from other collectives, appearing to have only one site, with five strips, each updating a different day of the week.

And, in non-[web]comics news, this one’s for the ladies.

Catching Up After MoCCA

Thanks to everybody that’s been sending me story tips and suchlike — still going through the backlog that developed during the MoCCA aftermath. In the meantime, please enjoy the following:

  • Ramses Luther Smuckles + KitchenAid® stand mixer = pretty much all the awesome I need in my life, really.
  • Happy Birthday! Today marks 8 years of Schlock Mercenary without filler or missed updates, produced by the so-similar-to-me-it’s eerie Howard Tayler. I forget, Howard — which one of us is the evil twin?
  • Noted at PvP this morning:

    I just got an email from my friend Shena about an interview with Garfield creator Jim Davis. She said that Jim mentioned PvP. I checked out the interview at the Universal Press website.

    Q: What’s the last time you laughed out loud over a comic strip that another cartoonist did?

    A: “It was just a few weeks ago. The strip is PVP (Player vs. Player) by Scott Kurtz. His timing is flawless. PVP isn’t in newspapers, it’s online! Some of the sharpest stuff is being done online by some very talented, young artists. They keep me looking over my shoulder.”

  • Mike Russell always points me to good stuff — today it’s new updates at Serenity Tales and a new strip called Bad Mile that looks intriguing in a distinctly non-polite fashion.

MoCCA ’08 In Pictures

Photos from MoCCA art fest 2008; see the last couple of days for details as to who is doing what.

MocCA Report (Without Fire)

First of all, congratulations to Tyler Page, a regular exhibitor at MoCCA, who skipped for a very good reason — his wife Cori gave birth the day before the show. We at Fleen wish the family all the best and hope to see the little one at all future MoCCAs.

From the Books Department:

  • Ryan North reports he’s working on the next Dinosaur Comics book; instead of the ‘best of’ approach he took in YWFIMOOM, this one will be the full run of strips from 2006. There will be a secret naming convention to Dinosaur Comics books from here on out, which you may try to unravel by purchasing all future volumes. Look for it to be released sometime next year.
  • Cat Garza looked very happy behind a dwindling pile of the Secrets and Lies anthology he edited. He had every right to be considering the large number of contributors and tight production schedule (he only solicited for contributions a week after last Fall’s SPX). Cat’s a sterling gentleman, and I was pleased to make his acquaintance.
  • David Malki ! saw great success from the debut of Beards of Our Forefathers, and is presently working on volume 2 of Dispatches From Wondermark Manor for release next month in San Diego. Look for Malki ! to shift his merchandise operations to Topatoco in the near term, leading to exciting stuff-bundle opportunities.
  • Also debuting at MoCCA was Chris Yates‘s Set it to Awesome, which is an astoundingly heavy book, what with the glossy full-color photos on every page. To this reporter’s eye, it outsold everything on the show floor except for POOP signs.
  • Meredith Gran sold out of pretty much everything she brought, and is preparing for San Diego by sending the second Octopus Pie book to press in the next week. After that, we at Fleen hear plans of animations from Ms Gran.
  • Also sold out: Spike went home without a single copy of Templar, AZ Book 1 left, and took plenty of pre-orders for the forthcoming Book 2. I pre-ordered mine back when there was snow on the ground — it’s got Reagan on the cover!
  • Hope Larson does the coolest book customization ever — buy a copy of her thoroughly charming Chiggers, and she’ll take off the dust cover and paint directly onto the pigment-thirsty hard cover.
  • Kean Soo‘s Jellaby sketchbook is incredibly cute, yet Soo himself is a right-hand-rule-throwin’ badass. After the Jellaby story finishes in next year’s graphic novel, look for a third volume of short stories.

Not books:

  • Andy Bell‘s latest toy, The Giver, should be on a boat from far shores about now, making availability at San Diego a possibility (I suppose it depends on if Customs wants to be cooperative or not).
  • Rosemary Mosco is thoroughly delightful, selling me her very last paleontology-themed alphabet print; we spoke widely over sophisticated adult-type beverages about things that are extinct and the people that study them.

Webcomickers seen at the show, in addition to the above, included Jon Rosenberg, Rich Stevens, Jeff Rowland, Sam Brown, Jeph Jacques, Chris Hastings, Alexander Danner, Dave Roman, Raina Telgemeier (who reports the with her last Babysitters Club book about to be released, she is looking forward to receiving hate mail from people upset about her treatment of the X-Men instead of her treatment of Kristy, Stacie, et. al.), Randall Munroe, Ryan Sias, Dirk Tiede, Shaenon Garrity, Danielle Corsetto, Bryan Lee O’Malley, and MoCCA curator-extraordinaire Jen Babcock.

Overheard in casual conversation:

Kean Soo, on Ryan North — I have dirt on the Man-Mountain.
Ryan North, in sad confirmation — I have made some bad decisions.

Photos tomorrow.

Command Terminated, All Units Returned

At 3:05pm on June 8, the fire alarms sounded in the Puck Building; like all New York City fire alarms, they’re designed to be annoying as hell. Like all New Yorkers, the crowd was nonplussed and went about their interactions with the exhibitors … in New York, the alarm doesn’t mean anything unless somebody makes an announcement. At 3:10 it’s quiet again; three cycles of the alarm and some shouted announcements that there was no need for worry did the trick.

At 3:15, Matt Murray (President and Executive Director of MoCCA) asks everybody to leave; he has a loud voice that both carries and conveys that he will brook no foolishness. A few vendors look hopeful that a fire means they won’t have to carry unsold merchandise home with them.

A few minutes later on the street, the first due fire companies have already set up on the “A” side of the building: Engine 33 and Ladder 20 have emptied their crew compartments and the firefighters are pulling out Scott packs. Then more apparatus shows up: Engine 24, Engine 9, Hook & Ladder 5, Battalion 2, but the crowd hasn’t been moved away from the sidewalk in front of the Puck yet. That’s well within the collapse zone, and it’s where no fire commander will allow a crowd to interfere with operations.

Normally, the incident commander will send some guys in shirt sleeves to verify it’s a false alarm, and everybody can go home, but there’s the crew of Ladder 20 in full turnout gear. They think something’s really happening, and one of them says, “We’ve got a report of fire in the basement.” The sweeps will be done according to the book; what with all the paints, wall fixtures, fabrics, solvents, and thousands of other petro-based products that make up modern decor, they won’t put anybody across the threshold without an air bottle. Beautiful decorative elements, really: lightweight, cheap, and when you heat ’em to the burning point, they start throwing off cyanide analogs that melt your lungs after the second breath. The crowd is still coming down from the seventh floor.

The Ladder 20 guys are looking serious; the Puck is an old building — from before the Triangle Shirtwaist fire, even — and firefighters hate old buildings. They especially hate old basements because there’s not so many ways out of them. They’re mentally running down what they know of the building, figuring their sweeps, knowing exactly how many steps they have to cover to pull themselves and their partner out of a situation that suddenly goes bad and into sweet, clear air. “Stay safe,” I say. He nods.

The thing you have to understand is, firefighters are crazy. When EMTs have to strip a patient, we reach for the trauma shears that will cut through a leather jacket or the ballistic nylon straps of an aramid-fiber armorvest like a hot truck through butter. A fire-rated turnout coat and bunker pants laughs at trauma shears; to cut one sleeve is three solid minutes of careful cutting and ripping and cursing. The coat weighs as much as your year old nephew, the chubby one.

Then when they’ve emptied their second 30-minute air bottle and get sent to the rehab area, firefighters don’t take off that coat — they sit in the cooling chairs slamming Gatorade and cursing the EMTs who’re trying to coax blood pressures and core temps down and pulse-oxes up, consciously willing their pulse rates back below 150 so they can get up and go back in.

It’s 101 degrees according to the thermometer under the vodka billboard on the corner of Houston, and every one of these guys is losing 2 kilos of water weight just standing around in that gear. And that’s just the 30 kilos of equipment that gives you a rational chance of not dying once you cross the threshold — add in the weapons that will actually let you knock down the fire and you’re carrying an extra 40, 45 kilos into an environment that’s 3000 degrees Fahrenheit and you love it. Do not ask firefighters to put on all this crap and then deny them the chance to do something worthwhile. They are ready to go in, now.

And just like that, it’s done; an officer in shorts goes jogging up the steps, running accountability on his guys coming out. Scott packs come off, tools go away, and they clear the scene — first the engines, then the big unwieldy trucks. It’s 3:35 and they’re getting ready to wrangle the crowd back in. In 20 minutes, the line outside will be gone, Matt Murray will be drenched with sweat, and the show back in full swing. Just another day in New York City.

Con recap and photos tomorrow.

OMIGOD OMIGOD OMIGOD WHAT IS THE AWESOMEST THING EVER?

Answer: Scary Go Round Feats of Strength entry that crosses over with the late, lamented Return to Sender (currently offline; Vera I’ll pay to renew the site if you want me to).

Go read it NOW NOW NOW.

Indy Comics Burns Down Puck Building, New Yorkers Aghast At The Carnage

Photos to come later, but the highlight of MoCCA this year had to be the mid-afternoon Sunday fire alarms that caused the building to be evacuated in the midst of a 101°F heat wave (38 Celsius for those of you in sensible parts of the world). We got photos of the chaos and firefighter quotes and a full recap starting a little later but for now, we can sum up the show with one word: books.

Lotta books debuted from a lotta creators, books announced for iminent (and not-so-iminent) publication. And the alarms hit 30 seconds after Meredith Gran sold out of Octopus Pie volume 1. COINCIDENCE?