Wednesday, January 07, 2015

The Post on Charlie Hebdo terrorism

Gunmen storm Paris satirical newspaper, killing at least 12


By Virgile Demoustier, Anthony Faiola and Brian Murphy January 7 2015
http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/europe/gunmen-storm-paris-satirical-newspaper-killing-at-least-11/2015/01/07/f358b17a-9660-11e4-aabd-d0b93ff613d5_story.html

Assailants in Paris appear heavily armed with military-style equipment

By Thomas Gibbons-Neff January 7 2015
http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/checkpoint/wp/2015/01/07/assailants-in-paris-appear-heavily-armed-with-military-style-equipment/


#JeSuisCharlie: Cartoonists react to the Charlie Hebdo massacre in Paris

By Abby Ohlheiser
Washington Post Comic Riffs blog January 7 2015
http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/comic-riffs/wp/2015/01/07/cartoonists-react-to-charlie-hebdo-massacre-in-paris/


What is Charlie Hebdo, the provocative satirical newspaper attacked by gunmen in Paris?

By Abby Phillip and Abby Ohlheiser January 7 2015
http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/world/wp/2015/01/07/what-is-charlie-hebdo-the-provocative-satirical-magazine-attacked-by-gunmen-in-paris/

Comic Riffs on Charlie Hebdo terrorism

CHARLIE HEBDO: American cartoonists condemn today's attack, hail slain satirists as 'heroes' [UPDATED]

By Michael Cavna Washington Post Comic Riffs blog January 7  2015
http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/comic-riffs/wp/2015/01/07/charlie-hebdo-american-cartoonists-condemn-todays-attack-hail-slain-satirists-as-heroes/

Today: KAL on Kojo Nnamdi show at 1 pm


From: Kevin Kallaugher


I will be on the Kojo Nnamdi show today during the 1 o'clock hour to discuss the tragedy in Paris. Please call in with any observations.

http://thekojonnamdishow.org/shows/2015-01-07/an_attack_on_a_french_newspaper_an_attack_on_political_satire

January 9: The Art of Richard Thompson at Politics and Prose

Richard tells me he will be in the audience, as will I and Bono Mitchell.

Nick Galifianakis, Gene Weingarten,and David Apatoff - The Art of Richard Thompson

Jan 9 2015 7:00 pm

Named the Outstanding Cartoonist of 2010 by the National Cartoonists Society, Richard Thompson is best known for his syndicated series, Cul de Sac. But his work encompasses much more, and in this colorful career retrospective, six of his peers present the different facets of Thompson's art. Join Galifianakis, Washington Post cartoonist and author of If You Loved Me, You'd Think This Was Cute, Weingarten, Pulitzer-winning journalist who writes The Washington Post's "Below the Beltway" column, and Apatoff, an illustration scholar whose recent work includes a biography of illustrator Robert Fawcett. They will be interviewed by Michael Cavna, writer, artist, and lapsed cartoonist now producing The Washington Post's "Comic Riffs." (Andrews McMeel)

$35.00
ISBN-13: 9781449447953
Availability: On Our Shelves Now
Published: Andrews McMeel Publishing, 11/2014

Want more than just ComicsDC?

 The D.C. Area Comic Scene  by Eden Miller is at http://dc-area-comics-scene.tumblr.com/

Ben Hatke's 'Return of Zita the Space Girl' best-seller for First Second

First Second's Big 2014 Books, and the Numbers
January 7, 2015 @ 5:18 am EST
http://icv2.com/articles/news/view/30577/mark-siegel-interview-part-1

Tuesday, January 06, 2015

The Year According to Toles

The Year According to Toles ran in the Post on December 28th, but try to find it on their website. Instead here's Tom's main page at the paper

Jeff Kinney's DC roots mentioned on CBS News

"Diary of a Wimpy Kid" author's better dream

Talk about an unlikely story: A failed cartoonist writes a book for adults that ends up on the CHILDREN'S best-seller list! Unlikely or not, it's the story our Rita Braver has to tell.

CBS News' Sunday Morning January 4, 2015

http://www.cbsnews.com/news/diary-of-a-wimpy-kid-authors-better-dream/

New blog: Upcoming Week at Fantom Comics





Here's what's coming up at Fantom over the next week

Upcoming Week at Fantom

News, Reviews and Ted Cruz*

Gooood Mooooorning Fantom Fans!

From now on you have an email from the folks at Fantom to look forward to every Tuesday morning.

It'll be short and sweet. Honest! It'll just be a link to our once a week blog post laying out everything that's going on in the store in the coming week. A one-stop shop, if you will.

Without further ado, here's the link.


*Ted Cruz inserted for rhyming purposes only





Jon McNaught in the Post

Monday, January 05, 2015

So who was Bill Talburt? [UPDATED]

This question came up a few days ago. I knew who to turn to for answers.

Sara Duke, ace Library of Congress curator and author of a biographical dictionary ComicsDC put online, tells us
:

In addition to being Dan Perkin's (Tom Tomorrow's) grandfather-in-law:


Talburt, Harold M., 1895-1966
American editorial cartoonist and comic strip creator, born in Toledo, Ohio on February 19, 1895. He began his career as a correspondent for the Toledo Times. He joined the staff of the Toledo News-Bee. In 1921 he became a cartoonist for the Scripps-Howard news bureau in Washington, which had just opened. He cartooned for the Washington Daily News while he served as chief Washington cartoonist for Scripps-Howard. He also created the comic strip Casey the Cop around 1922. In 1933, he received a Pulitzer Prize for one of his Washington Daily News cartoons. He published two compilations of his work: Talburt (1943) and Cartoons: Largely Political (ca. 1943). He retired from cartooning in 1966, and died of cancer in Kenwood, Maryland on October 22, 1966.

Info from: "Our Comic Artists," chapter 38 in Our American Humorists / Thomas L. Masson. New York: Moffat, Yard and Company, 1922, p. 430, viewed online:  10/29/2010; Harold Talburt Cartoons: an inventory of his cartoons at Syracuse University, Syracuse University Library, viewed online: 11/27/2010 [Art Wood Collection]

Here is an example of Sunstroke! an editorial cartoon that was put into production as a World War II propaganda poster.

A fanzine called Cartoonews #15 reprinted an 8-page Scripps-Howard article on him. A copy is in Michigan State's Comic Art Collection and they're mailing me a copy of the article.

Ryan Holmberg on early Tezuka frictions

The Fukui Ei'ichi Incident and the Prehistory of Komaga-Gekiga

BY Ryan Holmberg Jan 5, 2015
http://www.tcj.com/the-fukui-eiichi-incident-and-the-prehistory-of-komaga-gekiga/

January 6: Ripley: Believe It or Not: American Experience on tv


Ripley: Believe It or Not: American Experience

Robert Ripley's obsession with the odd made him one of the richest men in America. Over three decades his "Believe It or Not" franchise grew into an entertainment empire, and the eccentric, globetrotting playboy became a national celebrity. Watch an in-depth profile on American Experience.

Ripley: Believe It or Not: American Experience airs Tuesday, January 6 at 9pm on WETA TV 26 & WETA HD.


Tue., January 6, 2015
9:00 pm
(60 minutes)

Ripley: Believe It or Not  

A profile of Leroy Robert Ripley (1890-1949), aka Robert L. Ripley, the man behind the famed "Believe It or Not!" franchise, which began as a comic strip before expanding into radio, film and TV.

WETA TV 26 Logo

Tue., January 6, 2015
9:00 pm
(60 minutes)

Ripley: Believe It or Not  

A profile of Leroy Robert Ripley (1890-1949), aka Robert L. Ripley, the man behind the famed "Believe It or Not!" franchise, which began as a comic strip before expanding into radio, film and TV.

WETA HD Logo

Wed., January 7, 2015
7:00 am
(60 minutes)

Ripley: Believe It or Not  

A profile of Leroy Robert Ripley (1890-1949), aka Robert L. Ripley, the man behind the famed "Believe It or Not!" franchise, which began as a comic strip before expanding into radio, film and TV.

WETA HD Logo

Wed., January 7, 2015
8:00 am
(60 minutes)

Tupperware  

"Modern dishes for modern living" (and they "burped," no less), sold by women at "home parties." This slice of 1950s Americana is recalled in "Tupperware!" "The era and the product were made for each other," says one of the Tupperware "ladies" who are interviewed throughout the hour. Husbands are interviewed too because Tupperware was oftentimes a family affair, with the men working behind the scenes. The man in charge: Earl Tupper, who invented the sealable plastic containers. But a woman, Brow

WETA HD Logo

Wed., January 7, 2015
10:00 am
(60 minutes)

Ripley: Believe It or Not  

A profile of Leroy Robert Ripley (1890-1949), aka Robert L. Ripley, the man behind the famed "Believe It or Not!" franchise, which began as a comic strip before expanding into radio, film and TV.

- See more at: http://www.weta.org/tv/program/american-experience-0#sthash.VPX7Grkf.dpuf

New International Journal of Comic Art issue is shipping to subscribers

Go to http://www.ijoca.com to order a copy or renew your subscription for 2015.


Sunday, January 04, 2015

Friday, January 02, 2015

Robot 6 checks in with Rafer Roberts and Carla Speed McNeil...

...as well as some other cartoonists who aren't fortunate enough to live in ComicsDC's coverage area.

Creators weigh in on 2014 and 2015 (Part 1) [Al Ewing, Alison Sampson, Christopher Golden, Corinna Bechko, Enrica Jang, Jane Irwin, Jen Van Meter, Judith Stephens, Matthew Petz, Rafer Roberts, Ross Campbell, Seth Kushner,].

by Tim O'Shea | December 31, 2014 http://robot6.comicbookresources.com/2014/12/creators-weigh-in-on-2014-and-2015-part-1/

http://robot6.comicbookresources.com/2014/12/creators-weigh-in-on-2014-and-2015-part-1/2/

http://robot6.comicbookresources.com/2014/12/creators-weigh-in-on-2014-and-2015-part-1/3/


Creators weigh in on 2014 and 2015 (Part 4) [G. Willow Wilson, Tom Spurgeon, Paul Maybury, Chris Roberson, Carla Speed McNeil, Claire Connelly, Patrick Dean, Michael Allred, Amy Chu, Jamie S. Rich, David Lopez and Jeff Loveness].

by Tim O'Shea | January 1, 2015

http://robot6.comicbookresources.com/2015/01/creators-weigh-in-on-2014-and-2015-part-4/

http://robot6.comicbookresources.com/2015/01/creators-weigh-in-on-2014-and-2015-part-4/2/


Richard Thompson is another positive on Tom Spurgeon's year-end roundup

Jan 17 in Richmond: Leading Illustrator's Poe Art Surveyed in Major Exhibit






1914-16 E. Main St.
Richmond, VA 23223

News Release
Contact: Chris Semtner

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Exhibit Surveys Four Decades of Richard Corben's Poe Artwork
From January 17 until April 19, 2015, the Edgar Allan Poe Museum in Richmond, Virginia will host Reimagining Poe: The Poe Illustrations of Richard Corben a major exhibit surveying forty years of illustrations to Poe's works by Eisner Award-winning artist Richard Corben. This, the first retrospective of Corben's Poe illustrations, will feature several original drawings from the artist's personal collection.  The exhibit will open with a lecture about Corben's illustrations by Randolph Macon College professor M. Thomas Inge on January 17 at 5p.m. The exhibit opening and lecture will be part of the Poe Museum's annual Poe Birthday Bash, the world's largest celebration devoted to the nineteenth century author's birthday.

Richard Corben (born 1940) is a comic book artist and illustrator named   Corben began his career in animation before turning to underground comics. In 1976 he adapted a Robert E. Howard story into what is considered the first graphic novel, Bloodstar. He is best known for his comics appearing in Heavy Metal Magazine. His illustrious career has included work in album covers and movie posters, collaboration on a graphic novel with rock musician and filmmaker Rob Zombie, and an award-winning short film Neverwhere. He is the winner of the 2009 Spectrum Grand Master Award, and he was elected to the Will Eisner Award Hall of Fame in 2012.

For over forty years, Corben has established himself as one of the most extraordinary illustrators of Poe's works. His Edgar Allan Poe adaptations have appeared on the pages of the comic books Creepy, Edgar Allan Poe's Haunt of Horror, and Edgar Allan Poe's Spirits of the Dead. Among his dozens of comic book adaptations of Poe's tales and poems are popular favorites like "The Raven" and "The Cask of Amontillado," as well as little known classics like "Alone" and "Israfel." Not content with literal illustrations of Poe's words, Corben's exquisite artwork is often paired with his own unusual and innovative reinventions of the stories. In the introduction to Corben's latest collection of Poe adaptations, Edgar Allan Poe's Spirits of the Dead, Dr. M. Thomas Inge states, "Corben has proven to be the most acute and creative interpreter of Poe in comics history."


Edgar Allan Poe is the internationally influential author of such tales of "The Raven," "The Tell-Tale Heart," and "The Black Cat." He is credited with inventing the mystery genre as well as with pioneering both the modern horror story and science fiction. Poe died under mysterious circumstances at the age of forty. Although much of his life is known through contemporary documents, some areas of his life remain shrouded in mystery.

Opened in 1922, the Edgar Allan Poe Museum of Richmond is the world's finest collection of Edgar Allan Poe artifacts and memorabilia. The five-building complex features permanent exhibits of Poe's manuscripts, personal items, clothing, and a lock of the author's hair. The Poe Museum's mission is to interpret the life and influence of Edgar Allan Poe for a global audience. Edgar Allan Poe is America's first internationally influential author, the inventor of the detective story, and the forerunner of science fiction; but he primarily considered himself a poet. His poems "The Raven," "Annabel Lee," and "The Bells" are classics of world literature.

For more information, contact Chris Semtner at the Poe Museum at chris@poemuseum.org or 888-21-EAPOE. More information and a complete list of Poe-related activities can be found at http://www.poemuseum.org/events.php.




Jan 3: Shoff Promotions Comic Book & Sports Card Show

I'm sending you a last reminder of our upcoming Shoff Promotions
Comic Book & Sports Card Show together again SATURDAY JANUARY 3 10am-3pm at our new added location- the Annandale Fire House Hall 7128 Columbia Pike Annandale Virginia 22003

Plenty of great collectibles for sale such as Gold, Silver, Bronze & Modern Age
Comic Books, Nonsports cards from the 1880's to the present, PLUS Vintage to present day sports cards including a wide array of hockey cards, sports memorabilia & autographs PLUS Old Records and Hobby supplies of all types.
Artists Angela McKendrick & Dan Nokes and sports author Gary Sarnoff will also be joining us.

Directions: shoffpromotions.com
START THE NEW YEAR RIGHT- SEE YOU SATURDAY JANUARY 3
Nick Shoff

WITH THIS NOTICE ONLY ************ $1 Off All ADULT Admissions in your Party* (Regularly $3 NOW only $2) *** FREE - YES -FREE admission fee:18 years old and younger..

Thursday, January 01, 2015

Jan. 20: Kidd, Ishii and Kolbeins at Fantom Comics

Chip Kidd, Graham Kolbeins and Anne Ishii will be at Fantom Comics on Jan. 20 (7-9 p.m.) for the launch of "Massive: Gay Erotic Manga and the Men Who Make It" (Fantagraphics). 

From the Facebook event post: "Big, burly, lascivious, and soft around the edges: welcome to the hyper-masculine world of Japanese gay manga. Massive: Gay Erotic Manga and the Men Who Make It is the first English-language anthology of its kind: an in-depth introduction to nine of the most exciting comic artists making work for a gay male audience in Japan. Jiraiya, Seizoh Ebisubashi and Kazuhide Ichikawa are three of the irresistibly seductive, internationally renowned artists featured in Massive, as well as Gengoroh Tagame, the subject of The Passion of Gengoroh Tagame: Master of Gay Erotic Manga."


Art Hondros in Michigan State University's Comic Art Collection

When Art was demonstrating against gun violence outside Capitol Hill last month, he gave me copies of his Song of Sandy Hook comic book for a couple of comic libraries. MSU's librarian Randy Scott has received and cataloged their copy.

THE YEAR IN CARTOONS: Looking at 2014 through the prism of Cavna’s editorial cartoons

THE YEAR IN CARTOONS: Looking at 2014 through the prism of Cavna's editorial cartoons

By Michael Cavna
Washington Post Comic Riffs blog December 31, 2014
http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/comic-riffs/wp/2014/12/31/the-year-in-cartoons-looking-at-2014-through-the-prism-of-cavnas-editorial-cartoons/

Local "Comics positives" by Tom Spurgeon

A couple or three old bits for the New Year

The Washington Post did something, probably not in the actual paper, on editorial cartoons in 2003.

In 1939, Charles Howard collected original cartoons from Washington newspaper cartoonists Clifford Berryman, H.M. Talbert and Gene Elderman. I have no idea why the Art Institute of Chicago has a 4-page finding aid to them on its website. Nor do I know who Talbert is.

Elderman, courtesy of GU
Harry Hopkins and the NewDeal: As Seen by the Cartoonists was an exhibit at Georgetown University in 1998. It also included Berryman, Elderman and Bill Talburt (note spelling)

Cartoon and comics deaths in 2014

Never a pleasant thing to have compiled, but people should be remembered for their achievements. Corrections and additions welcome. Updated with comic strip cartoonist Max Gwin, animation voice actor Christine Josephine Cavanaugh,

Deaths in 2014 included underground comix publisher and first comic book store owner Gary Arlington, Tony Auth, Dick Ayers, comics journalist Bill Baker, British car cartoonist Jim Bamber, Charles Barsotti, caricaturist Garrett Bender, underground comix store owner Stanley Bobrof, Brumsic Brandon, Jr., Prism Comics' David Paul Brown, Cambodian cartoonist Ung Bun Heang, Isabelle "Barbara" Hall Fiske Calhoun (aka Barbara Hall), Hamlet Campagna (aka Hal Camp), "Oyster Stew" cartoonist Michael Carpenter,  François Cavanna - cofounder of Hara-Kiri and Charlie Hebdo, animation voice actor Christine Josephine Cavanaugh, Brazilian comics artist André Coelho, Scottish comic book store owner Neil Craig, Robert's ex-wife Dana Crumb, Blondie cartoonist Frank Cummings, comic book artist Jeremy Dale, editorial cartoonist Bill Dunn, Joseph Escourido, Socialist Worker cartoonist Phil Evans, Al Feldstein, Paul Flannery, San Antonio Express-News cartoonist Leo Garza, Stan Goldberg, El Chapulin Colorado Mexican television superhero Roberto 'Chespirito' Gómez Bolaños, Dandy cartoonist Charles Grigg, comic strip cartoonist Max Gwin, gag cartoonist David Harbaugh, Archie Andrews radio voice and tv voice actor Bob Hastings, comic book writer C.J. Henderson, New Zealand cartoonist David Henshaw, cartoonist turned children's book author Eric Hill, PS Magazine editor Don Hubbard, Etta Hulme, Egyptian cartoonist Mostafa Hussein, comics publisher Larry Ivie, store owner Brian Jacoby, gag and comic strip cartoonist Alexander Ralston "Bud" Jones, Jr. , Pinocchio voice actor Dick Jones, animation voice Casey Kasem, editorial cartoonist Jon B Kennedy, Fred Kida, "Super" Duper cartoonist Bill Kresse, editorial cartoonist Dan Lynch, comics historian and Little Orphan Annie writer Jay Maeder, Stroker McGurk cartoonist Tom Medley, British comic book writer Steve Moore, Esquire cartoonist Babette Beinfield Newburger, minicomics cartoonist Catherine Peach, Graphic Nature cartoonist Larry Pendleton, manga and anime researcher Timothy Perper, gag cartoonist Jeff Pert, Source Comics and Games store owner Dominic "Nick Post" Postiglione, animator Arthur Rankin, small press cartoonist Chris Reilly, editorial cartoonist Mike Ritter, Vijay Narain "Vins" Seth,  Pran Sharma, Joe Shuster Awards volunteer Debra Jane Shelly, Greek cartoonist Ilias Skoulas, animator Michael Sporn, Bhob Stewart, animator Robert Taylor, Dungeons & Dragons cartoonist David A. Trampier, Disney biographer Bob Thomas, Morrie Turner, Viz book designer Courtney Utt, Morris Weiss, British pocket cartoonist Frank Whitford, Aladdin voice actor Robin Williams, sports cartoonist Amadee Wohlschlaeger, collector Art Wood, Bermudan editorial cartoonist Peter Woolcock, political cartoonist George Edward Zeleski.

Wednesday, December 31, 2014

Happy New Year! from ComicsDC


"Never again!" / Frank A. Nankivell, courtesy of the Library of Congress.

1908 doesn't seem so far away, does it.

Big Planet Comics New Year's day sale

Happy New Year!

New Year's eve at the hotel prosperity / Kep, courtesy of the Library of Congress

1909, but change the reservation cards slightly and run it again, Sam.

A Memorial to a Cartoonist Friend: a guest post by Kevin 'Kal' Kallaugher

a guest post by Kevin 'Kal' Kallaugher

The lessons from a fallen comrade…


Today, December 31, 2014, a memorial service is being held for a brother cartoonist in the tiny island of Bermuda. Though his name is not widely known in the international community of cartoonists and satirists, Peter Woolcock was certainly a legend to the 67,000 inhabitants of the island.

For three decades he lampooned with great dexterity, the foibles of the Bermudian political class. It was a sad shock to all when we learned last month that Peter had been hit by a car as he was delivering his weekly (and last) cartoon to the Royal Gazette newspaper.

This past summer I had the great honor of getting to know Peter during a 3-month sojourn as Artist-in-Residence at the Masterworks art Museum in Bermuda. Peter, then 88, was a sprite and engaging man with a robust curiosity and a boyish passion for the cartoon arts. We would chat for hours about the benefits of certain pen nibs and the magic of a peer's brushstrokes.

We also talked about the celebrated past and the challenging future of our profession, sharing an enormous sense of gratitude that we both managed, somehow, to eke out livings as cartoonists.

Peter would always note that cartoonists from big market countries like the USA and the UK had it very easy. Try being a cartoonist on an island, he would tell me.

He had to tread very carefully on the subject of the day because there would be a chance he might run into the very same subject (or her cousin) in the supermarket on Saturday or church on Sunday.

As I studied Peter's work, I realized how right he was. Bermuda is a beautiful and fascinating place to visit. Yet as a resident, you get a very different perspective on the island. What at first seems like a vacation paradise soon becomes a small village surrounded by a wall of water. In addition, Bermuda is one of the most densely populated jurisdictions on the planet…If peace is to be kept, everyone must find a way to coexist in a civilized fashion.  Boisterous satirical criticism may not always be welcome.

As you can imagine, this is not the natural habitat for your typical editorial cartoonist. But Peter was not your typical cartoonist. He understood the tolerance level of his audience. He opted to employ the needle rather that the hatchet in his work. Over the course of thirty years he knew an artfully aimed needle in the nether regions would certainly get his target's attention.

Today the island of Bermuda is celebrating the career and contributions of one of its unique and beloved citizens. Here in Maryland I am toasting him, as he would like, by hoisting an open bottle of India ink and a saying, with a smile:

For Peter Woolcock, a colleague whose needle was mightier than the sword.

KAL
Kevin Kallaugher

Tuesday, December 30, 2014

Feb 4: George O'Connor signing - Olympians

Big Planet Comics is proud to welcome New York Times bestselling creator George O'Connor, for his series Olympians!

The newest book in the Olympians series is Ares: Bringer of War. In Ares, the myth continues in the tenth year of the fabled Trojan War where two infamous gods of war go to battle. The spotlight is thrown on Ares, god of war, and primarily focuses on his battle with the clever and powerful Athena. As the battle culminates and the gods try to one-up each other to win, the human death toll mounts. Who will win this epic clash of power? And how many will have to die first?

Olympians website: http://www.olympiansrule.com/


Jan 18: John Reilly signing - Herald: Lovecraft & Tesla

Big Planet Comics is proud to welcome local writer John Reilly, for his new series Herald: Lovecraft & Tesla! It is published by Action Lab with art by Tom Rogers and Dexter Weeks.

When Nikola Tesla's fiancée, Amelia Earhart, steals a dangerous prototype engine for a trans-Atlantic flight, Tesla seeks out the interdimensional expertise of H.P. Lovecraft to save her. Lovecraft, however, has problems of his own as he investigates the identity of Cthulhu's Herald.

Herald facebook: https://www.facebook.com/HeraldComic
Herald twitter: https://twitter.com/HeraldComic

Former DC writer on Egyptian cartooning

Jonathan Guyer

The Art of Dissent

Brown Alumni Magazine January/February 2015

http://www.brownalumnimagazine.com/content/view/3853/32/

Monday, December 29, 2014

12/31: SHIELD comic launch at Third Eye Comics

Join us New Year's Eve for our SHIELD #1 Launch Party!

 

Click here for full details!

Comic Riffs on Doonesbury

'Doonesbury' and the U-Va. campus-rape strip: Garry Trudeau says that Rolling Stone's 'flaws' didn't change point of yesterday's comic

By Michael Cavna
Washington Post Comic Riffs blog December 29 2014
http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/comic-riffs/wp/2014/12/29/doonesbury-and-the-u-va-campus-rape-strip-garry-trudeau-says-that-rolling-stones-flaws-didnt-change-point-of-yesterdays-comic/

Comic Riffs on Stan Lee

STAN LEE'S BIRTHDAY: As the comics legend turns 92 today, here are our 20 Favorite Stan Lee Quotes…

By Michael Cavna
Washington Post Comic Riffs blog December 28
2014
http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/comic-riffs/wp/2014/12/28/stan-lees-birthday-as-the-comics-legend-turns-92-today-here-are-our-20-favorite-stan-lee-quotes/

Herblock on C-Span2 Book TV

Herblock: A Political Cartoonist - History, Cartoons, Civil Rights, McCarthyism, Nixon (1993)

 Apr 12, 2014

Herbert Lawrence Block, commonly known as Herblock (October 13, 1909 -- October 7, 2001), was an American editorial cartoonist and author best known for his commentary on national domestic and foreign policy from a liberal perspective

SCAD student cartoonists from our area

Friday, December 26, 2014

Tom Spurgeon's SPX recollections

The Year in Cartoons in today's Post

Editorial cartoons, that is. I can't be bothered finding it on their website, since it's not immediately obvious on the Opinion page. And honestly, with all due respect to the cartoonists selected, it's not a very interesting group of cartoons either. Go watch Ann Telnaes' latest video on the site instead.

Toles' Year should appear in a few days.