The webcomics blog about webcomics

Things That Are Not MoCCA Recaps

Photos of webcomickers from the big show coming tomorrow. In the meantime, two items relating to creators who have webcomics on hold for the moment.

Up first, Space Coyote, creator of the on-hiatus Saturnalia, drew a picture a while back, tranforming the familiar into a new idiom. Job offers resulted, culminating in a story in Simpsons Comics #131, a small epic entitled Too Crazy, Juvenile Prankster: BARTOMU!. I am not ashamed to admit that I LOLed. (story first seen on ¡Journalista!, although I saw that TV scene on DeviantArt a while back).

And straight outta Magical Brooklyn: Ian Jones-Quartey popped by MoCCA on Saturday to let us all know about a new project: nockFORCE. Check out the funny at nockFORCE.com, or at IJ-Q’s LJ, and somebody please remind this guy of the First Law of RPG World (now scheduled to return in October 2057 … good going, Kayoden Usoden “The Chaos Seeker”!)

As for nockForce itself, the writing has the same loopy quality as the muchbeloved Bandwidth Theater shorts, and the animation feels loose & spontaneous without falling into the trap of aping Ren & Stimpy house style (I like John K. as much as the next guy, but too many young animtors can’t remember a time before him, and much of what gets produced these days comes across as Kricfalusi Lite™).

Eight Years

It’s quiet in webcomics today, approaching “dead” as all and sundry gear up for this weekend’s MoCCA festival o’ fun. Of note today:

  • Cat & Girl predates the turn of the century, and wants to give you a STICKER because it is AWESOME but you have to get your request postmarked TODAY.
  • It’s good to see that Bernie Hou‘s The Burgg back from its IMDB link-induced sluggishness.
  • He lives, I tell you! LIIIIIVVVVVES!

That’s it. Be sure to say howdy if you see me at MoCCA.

More on MoCCA

It’s been mentioned already, of course, but my short list of what to see at MoCCA is a little different from some of the ones Gary listed out earlier. The whole thing feels a little like The Small Press Expo, which I haven’t been to in (many) years but enjoyed greatly when I was there. Of course again, part of the fun with that was cramming four minicomics artists into one small shared table to cut way, way down on costs; I’m certain some of that will happen this weekend as well; I hear Matthew Reidsma‘s going to be there. Anyway, there’s a really interesting article about last year’s MoCCA, which got me thinking….

I’m excited to see Liz Baillie’s work, which I started reading primarily through a review I’d written for Xerography Debt . I’ve never seen the Dumbrella fellas in full convention swing, so I’m looking forward to that for certain. I like Pat Lewis‘s work, and Cathy Leamy’s.

But I want to hear what other people are interested in seeing! What are your recommendations for a first-time attendee?

Mea Culpa

In the list of webcomics creators to be found this weekend at MoCCA, we at Fleen inexplicably omitted Meredith Gran. We apologize for the oversight, and encourage all in the Greater New York City metroplex to come to MoCCA and buy something from Ms Gran.

In other news, Zach Weiner wants to know: why do my traffic numbers stagnate in the summer? Couple of theories I’ve seen bandied about:

  • Depending on how many of your readers are students, leaving free high-speed at school and going home where you have to compete for computer time may have an effect
  • Everybody’s outside while the weather is nice

Any other thoughts as to whys and wherefores of the summer slump?

Also:

  • Sometimes a simple gag is the best (link here after the archive locks).
  • Karen Elllis draws a kickass Wonder Woman.
  • Onezumi.com: 350 strips and counting.
  • Okay, I’m intrigued:

    I just launched my webcomic, Sensational George. It is a loosely-connected series featuring ambitious staplers, unemployed bears, angry jellyfish and zombies working as interns.

    Throw in some squid, and you got yourself a deal.

Aaaah! Eyes! COLOR!!

Should be about one more day to clear the backlog of news items — do bear with me. In the meantime:

Webcomics Storm Warning

Noticed on Little Gamers this morning, a link to The LJ and an essay by Josh Lesnick on webcomics art (focusing on what Mr T identified as the most popular strips according to Alexa). This is the sort of thing that’s prone to blowing up into a poo-flinging festival, given that a) art is pretty much the definition of subjective; and b) people like what they like (even, God help us, sad eyed clowns and Thomas Kinkade, Painter of Light).

It’s a subject that Lesnick is passionate about (the guy’s consciously reinvented his style in a quest to make it better), and he mostly avoids saying that particular creators are wrong in their designs, but I don’t think he’s going to change any minds and at this point, the best he can hope for is that people actually read the damn thing and try to understand his points before crapping on him. Oops, too late.

There are some thoughtful refutations of some of Lesnick’s arguments in there, but for the most part it’s breaking down as Wow, this was good or Wow, you suck, so you might want to skip the comments and just read the critique. For those falling into the latter camp, keep in mind that while it may appear to you that Lesnick’s essay was unsolicited, that doesn’t mean that the creators will find it unwelcome.

Less contentious things:

  • Dave Kellettt and Kris Straub, COME ON DOWN! (scroll down for priceless pics)
  • The SDCC shopping list gets larger: Wapsi Book 2
  • Lost in the Minifleen shuffle: Joe Chiappetta’s Silly Daddy (maybe the great-granddaddy of journal-type comics) is turning 16.
  • Nearly 300 episodes of a random-generated photo comic that I hadn’t heard of, but it reminds me (probably intentionally) of Found magazine, and that’s always a good thing.
  • Matt Buchwald (full disclosure: he pays us $0.20/day for that button ad over to the right) hit 500 strips at Fodi yesterday, so congrats are due.
  • And, lastly, News Free Comics. Hmmm.

Things That Became Webcomics

It will probably surprise nobody that I started in my geekly tendencies early, and a fair amount of my current reading habits can be laid squarely at the feet of three people: Wendy & Richard Pini and Phil Foglio; heck, my manga and anime habits can probably be blamed on Wendy Pini tossing out a stray reference to Tezuka somewhere around 1986 or ’87.

And while Foglio has made a wholesale jump to the web (cf: here and here), what of the Pinis, pioneers of the self-publishing movement? From Johanna Draper Carlson:

None of this means that Elfquest is going away, at least not yet. Pini has scripted the final arc, and she promises it will be a surprise…

Pini and her husband Richard recently ended their agreement with DC Comics, which published Elfquest for the past four years. They will now be handling the Elfquest properties through their own company, Warp Graphics, and Pini said the last arc may appear as a Web comic or a print comic. [emphasis mine]

Thoroughly intriguing, particularly as I met Mr Pini at the New York Comic Con in February, when he came by the Dumbrella booth specifically to meet Rich Stevens and talk about webcomics. If they decide to go that route, they will hopefully find the same success as Foglio (with Girl Genius as a current project, and reviving the long-lost Buck Godot and What’s New? properties)and Carla Speed McNeil (with Finder).

While all three of these creators had self-published ventures, it makes me wonder if marginal (but well-beloved) comics in danger of cancellation from the big publishers might find a home online. Foglio’s proven that giving away the pages and charging for the reprint is economically viable (indeed, advantageous to a large degree over printing individual pamphlets). What about it? Any print comics you’d like to see make the leap?

Fleen Guest Column: The Kea In, “Orphans”

Editor’s note: The Kea took our search for writers last year as a challenge, and started pumping out some high-quality commentary on [web]comics. Unfortunately, real life intruded, and despite a couple of comebacks, it’s been a bit quiet in the Godzone corner of webcomics comentary. That’s why I was thrilled to see that he wanted to drop a guest piece on us. Enjoy!

Having tried coming back from my hiatus, I found that I really don’t have time to keep The Kea’s Nest regularly updated, and that’s no good for anyone who might be interested in seeing what I’ve got to say about the world of webcomics. So I decided to take Gary up on his generous offer to put up my musings here at Fleen. If I find something else to say, I’ll see if he’ll let me post that too. [He will. -Ed.]

Something I’ve noticed about the very few New Zealand webcomics I’ve managed to track down is that they generally seem to have come from print media first. There are similarities to the various political cartoons I enjoy reading, they tend to be published in alternative newspapers before realising the benefits of coming online too. I’m not sure why it is a rule that could be applied to a whole country though. Perhaps it’s caused by our generally poor broadband connection to the wider web which makes us wary of uploading images, or maybe its something set in our heads that leads us to think that we need a physical presence to really have achieved notice.

I used to link to the comics of the Monsta artist, a guy who drew cute little green critters I remembered from my youth, when he was making regular updates. They were generally editorial cartoons such as one might find in newspapers next to the kinds of letters that make you sorry to share genomes with most of humanity. But after awhile he must have grown tired of updating or maybe he got too busy. As we are all aware, that’s very easy to do.

Most of the one-off NZ comics I’ve linked to in the past are likewise newspaper or magazine comics first (I would love to link to the weekly comic Max Media, which other kiwis might agree seems perfect for the web, but he has no website…). One of the few that actually seemed to be designed and put out on the web first was Newton Ghetto Anger which hasn’t been seen in quite some time…

The latest comic I would like to talk about is called Fishing For Orphans and is really just scans of James Squire’s comics for his university’s student newspaper. In particular this can be seen in his guide to student living:

Hopefully these all show you some of the more treacherous aspects of student life here in the Land of the Long White Cloud. Particularly the pointing knights. That’s just creepy. I mean, sometimes they don’t just point.

Squire has a gift for the obvious humour, and I don’t mean that in any sort of crude way. His is not the realm of fart gags and random nudity, merely for the cheap gag. No, instead he creates a situation which may be fairly mundane or perhaps totally off-beat and then follows it through to its hilarious yet completely foreseeable finale. Sometimes this means pounding the joke in more than strictly necessary but we are all the more enriched by such beatings.

There are a few times when you might begin to wonder if he’s picked up on tropes that have been floating around before, but as this is a print-to-web comic I wouldn’t assume he’s been so crass as to simply read someone else’s idea and use it. I have in mind the perils of Robots Hugging and the art stylings of the Perry Bible Fellowship.

A major theme of his is the Child on the Stool. As seen in some of the above examples, Child is not a complex character, he just wants to be accepted for who he is but not lost among the crowd and blended in. He has that insecurity we all share of wondering if we are special or whether in fact we just don’t fit in. He’s also not very clever… This mainly manifests in silly decisions made with the confidence of being sure of himself as well as the secretive protective nature of someone who needs to verify their place.

I have another kiwi comic in mind that even more clearly betrays its origins as a comic aimed for print, but I’ll talk about that some other time. I have seen in hobby/comic stores in this country many many independently produced black and white comic books and I think that this is the avenue a lot of beginning artists and writers are taking in their quest for recognition. I just want to buy all of them and send letters to each creator, letting them know about the benefits of putting their stuff online and hopefully finding a much wider audience than the sheep and busy busy office drones they might snare by their print books in New Zealand. I know there’s examples of this in the wider international webcomic world, but I’m fairly sure the trend has been the other way, am I right?

We at Fleen thank The Kea for his contributions, invite him to send anythign else that may occur to him, and owe him a beer if we’re ever in the same hemisphere.

Minifleen X (The Final Chapter)

Back to regular postings next week; got a couple of thinky pieces in my head that I haven’t been able to properly research. In the meantime, merch ho!

  • Oh man, character/logo patches for your clothing, that’s takin’ me back. Bonus points to the first webcomicker to offer a Bedazzled jean jacket.
  • Oh hell yes. Hey Dr McChris, any chance of having some on hand at MoCCA or SDCC for your adoring fans?
  • Marketing 101 time: Lots of creators offer picture galleries of people wearing/using their merch: you got your rock nerds (curiously 404’ed, so here’s the Google cache), and Topatoco has a photo gallery, and Sheldon just debuted photos of people & dogs reading his books (with the added bonus of famous people).

    But you can go a bit further — Ryan North offers not a single gallery, but rather pictures of people in shirts, linked to the particular shirts in the Dinosaur Comics merchateria, and he puts up a dozen or so new photos every month of so on his front-page newsbox. Want to drive customers to your stuff? Put up pictures of sexy, sexy readers (and remember: everybody is somebody’s fetish) wearing/reading/using that stuff.

  • Speaking of Topatoco (shut up, we were so!) want to win a Ouija board?
  • And finally, over at The QC, Jeph Jacques is feeling old. To knock him out of this funk, I propose birthday spankings at MoCCA next weekend. Bring your friends!

Minifleen IX (Return Of The Son Of Minifleen)

These mini deals are getting longer. Weird.

  • Do they let insects into 62 Achewood Court?
  • The definitive response to criticisms of FOOB.
  • From Shishio:

    In celebration of its upcoming two year anniversary, Cartridge Comics is holding a contest. The Cartridge Comics fan who demonstrates their fandom in the most creative fashion will win a number of prizes. More details here.

  • Greg Carter would like you to know:

    Gina Biggs and Greg Carter are taking the Red String / Abandon Webcomic Tour to Charlotte, NC, this weekend June 15-17, for Heroes Con! They will be camped out at table SP-23. That’s along the back wall at the right-hand corner of Indie Island.

    Gina will have copies of Volume One of Red String, and Greg will have a mini-comic sampler of Abandon, so please stop by and visit.

  • Rick Eades wonders, is “Newt and John” nothing more than a blatant ripoff of Beaver and Steve? Somebody needs to solve this question with science.
  • Alert reader Nick wishes to remind you that it’s the third anniversary School Spirit, which I confess to not be familiar with. Let’s let Nick fill us in:

    Set in an Australian primary (elementary) school next to a very active cemetery, it is celebrating its 3rd anniversary this week. Just thought the author deserved a shout-out for such a fine accomplishment.

    Shouted, Nick. And speaking of Australia, Byrobot is, in the words of co-creator (and admitted Aussie) Nic Carey, Back in pants.

  • Just in time for the McCloud trek’s Great White Tundra leg, Pat Race wishes you to know of webcomics from the from the frozen north: Alaska Robotics and Geek Fetish

And tomorrow, be sure to check back for a guest piece from one of my favorite webcomics commentators. Happy Thursday, everyone.