Showing posts with label comic strips. Show all posts
Showing posts with label comic strips. Show all posts

Saturday, January 24, 2009

Essential Dykes To Watch Out For Reviewed by American Prospect On-Line


In a post back in '07, I expressed surprise that the liberal political journal The American Prospect would actually devote its cover story to an article on super-hero comics. Alison Bechdel's "Dykes To Watch Out For", on the other hand, seems a more natural fit. Sure enough, a review of the new hardcover collection, The Essential Dykes To Watch Out For, was posted on the mag's web-site yesterday.

Wednesday, November 5, 2008

Goodye, Opus and Hello, President Obama

This past Sunday, November 2, after 28 years (well, 20 if you don't count the 8 year hiatus between Outland and Opus), Berkely Breathed and his bow-tied alter ego departed the pages of the Sunday comics section, with, if I can be honest here, more of a whimper than a bang. The most recent incarnation of the strip never really lived up to Bloom County in its heyday or even Outland at its best, but in all its forms, Breathed's strip has been one of the highlights of the comics section and will be missed. Luckily, I have all of the books, so I shan't be missing Opus too much.
Among Breathed's many accomplishments is his 1987 Pulitzer Prize for editorial cartooning. However, the events of last night throw into serious doubt Breathed's skills as a political fortune teller. In a sequence of strips from 1988 (which I intended to scan on Saturday to accompany this, but I chose instead to have a total emotional meltdown. We won't go into that in a parenthetical phrase. However, if you're reading along at home, said sequence is reprinted on pages three and four of Night of the Mary Kay Commandos and page 148 of Classics of Western Literature.), "deeply Democratic" Tom Binkley is beset with a "liberal Democrat guilt fit" because he thinks "Jesse Jackson is kinda loopy." He goes on to say, "Jesse can give a heck of a sermon...and he rhymes well...But I'm sorry...I...I just don't see him as the leader of the free world."
To assuage his father's anguish, young Mike Binkley calls on Oliver Wendell Jones' father, Frank, who assures Tom, "Speaking for blacks worldwide, we don't hate you!" and goes on to predict that "The first black in the White House will be a conservative."
To be fair to Breathed, given the political climate of the time (a time that extended to about six months ago, in truth), this was a perfectly reasonable assumption. And if Colin Powell had ever chosen to toss his gold star festooned hat into the ring, it most likely would have become reality.
Instead, last night, this nation elected to lead it the man described by his GOP critics as the most liberal member of the United States Senate.
It's funny, though, that four years ago, John Kerry was the most liberal senator. And I'm sure that if the race for the Democratic nomination had gone differently, you can just guess who would have found herself tagged as the Senate's most liberal member.

Monday, October 29, 2007

Tonight on PBS

Tonight's installment of the PBS series American Masters is devoted to "Good Ol' Charles Schulz", a portrait of the Peanuts creator, coming on the heels of David Michaelis' book, Schulz and Peanuts, an excerpt from which you'll find if you follow the link I've provided near the beginning of this run-on sentence. It's nice to see Schulz finally getting some attention. I'm not being sarcastic--a lot has been written about the strip, but its creator remains somewhat of an enigma to most people.
Anyway, American Masters airs tonight here in Columbus, Oh at 9 pm on WOSU (broadcast channel 34). For those of you reading this who live outside of our fair metropolis, check, as the old saying goes, thy local listings.

Friday, October 26, 2007

Rare Watterson

Who isn't a fan of Bill Watterson's work? This site is regularly updated and chock full of Watterson goodness: interviews, cartoons he did while attending Kenyon College, Calvin & Hobbes "bootlegs," a few political cartoons (circa 1981), Calvin & Hobbes sketches (some are (obvious) fakes), fan art and so much more! Thanks to the Daily Cartoonist blog for the link!

Sunday, September 30, 2007

Wasted Video

Greetings! Ray Tomczak here.
As you may know, I do a weekly comic called Wasted Potential that appears every Sunday on the web-sites ComicSpace, Drunk Duck, Webcomics Nation, Smackjeeves, and at my Wasted Potential blog.
If you didn't know that, pay close attention to the video below. It's a brief introduction to my strip, giving an overview of the basic concepts and main characters and the web-sites where you can see it, all set to music by Talking Heads.