Sunday, September 23, 2012

Meet a Local Cartoonist: Megami Jadeheart, a Special Intervention Convention Interview




Megami Jadeheart is a local webcomics cartoonist who is appearing this weekend at Intervention Con in Gaithersburg. I suspect she’s operating under a non de plume, but being polite, I didn’t ask. Ms. Jadeheart has been taking a break from her ongoing strip, Annie a Space Western, for health reasons but it is planning on returning to it. She was inking panels when I asked her to do this interview.

ComicsDC: What type of comic work or cartooning do you do?

Megami Jadeheart: I tend to do full page continuing narrative style comics, in the style of American Graphic Novels and Japanese Manga.

ComicsDC: How do you do it? Traditional pen and ink, computer or a combination?

MJ: Different comics are worked different ways.  Annie is usually drawn in pencil and inked by hand.  Then scanned and colored or shaded, and lettered digitally, but there are some pages that were drawn entirely on the computer, and some that were colored with Copic markers.  Annie is my experimental art style comic.

MJ:  I have worked on another comic called Sword Of Survival, which is a Zombie apocalypse story that very, very rarely gets touched, that is worked completely digitally but in the style of charcoal drawings.

ComicsDC: When (within a decade is fine) and where were you born?

MJ: I was born in the 80's in Dayton, Ohio.  There was a lot of corn and baseball when I was growing up.  And air shows.  The Dayton Air and Space Museum is awesome. XD.
 
ComicsDC: Why are you in Washington now?  What neighborhood or area do you live in?

Mom's work moved the family when I was ten, and after living briefly in Crofton and Bowie they settled us in Columbia.  I ran away to join the circus in Ithaca NY for a while though.

ComicsDC: What is your training and/or education in cartooning?

MJ: An associate’s degree in Fine Arts obtained at the wonderful HCC,  and most of an Animation Degree bounced off of it at UMBC.

ComicsDC: Who are your influences?

MJ: Spider-Man and Rumiko Takahashi.  A bit more seriously, my mother ran the art shows at science fiction conventions when I was a wee young thing, and was something of an artist herself.  She and her father always encouraged me in my art as a child, and after I lost my way in the confusion of middle school, my high school art teacher, Mrs. Coulson, reminded me that art was my love and passion, and encouraged me to push past the limits of a cartoony style and draw the real world.  She gave me a gentle push towards her art teacher, Jim Adkins, who teaches at HCC, and is one of the best artists, best teachers, and best people I have ever met.  He is right up there next to Stan Lee and Takahashi-San in my book.  Also, Phil Foglio and Wendi Pini.  Dear goodness, I probably misspelled all of those names.  This is why I draw and make people proofread my scripts.

ComicsDC: If you could, what in your career would you do-over or change?

MJ: I would have started earlier!   I also would have tried taking school down to part time when my health went bad, and tried finishing my animation degree.  I still love animating, and wish I got to do a little more of it.  Maybe if I get the chance, I'll animate part of Annie.

ComicsDC: What work are you best-known for?

MJ: Probably Annie, and a partially finished protect on DeviantArt where I set of to write a novelization of a video game.  That went over pretty well.

ComicsDC: What work are you most proud of?

MJ: Annie!  She is my baby, and my pride and joy.

ComicsDC: What would you like to do or work on in the future?

MJ: Dear goodness, there are so many other ideas.  Finish Annie, of course.  I want to work more on S.O.S.  There's a comedy series outlined called "The Adventures of Captain Michiko and the Starship Innuendo".  There's this theme in my work, I guess, women and space.  There's also a comic called I have a hundred or so pages thumbnailed for, inspired by a friend's novels.  But that one will wait to be released in tandem with the novel it's set during.

ComicsDC: What do you do when you're in a rut or have writer's block?

MJ: Spin my wheels in frustration.  For a while anyway.  Often, talking to my best friend will help me bring the idea bubbling back up.  And if I'm simply burnt out from doing, say, nothing but Annie for three to seven weeks, sometimes I just need to give my brain a vacation and go to one of the other worlds and work on S.O.S. or the novel one.  Or I play a video game, or I role play, or I sew something.  Sometimes your brain needs a break XD not to mention your hands.

ComicsDC:  What do you think will be the future of your field?

MJ: That's a tricky one.  Web comics are certainly big and very very accessible now.  I love print media, but web is so accessible, and there's no submission criteria.  You just do it and put it out there and people find you.  There are also people like Hussie of MS Paint who combine flash animation with comics and games, and I've seen both Marvel and Square-Enix play with adding games and interactivity to comics in app-comics for the iPad.  But in my personal experience and opinion, it doesn't always Add to the comic reading experience, to the story consuming and mood conveying, to have random mini games for the hell of it.  If multimedia is going to keep getting woven into comics, it needs to be done skillfully and very very intentionally.

ComicsDC: What local cons do you attend ? The Small Press Expo, Intervention, or others? Any comments about attending them?

MJ: Oh, I go to a lot of local cons.  Mostly Anime cons.  Intervention of course, Katsucon and Otakon.  Anime USA, CHS Otakufest and Tigercon. Anime Midatlantic, Nekocon.  I'll be going to Magfest for the first time this year, and will be looking into T-Mode and Zenkaikon, too. I'm even looking at Anime Boston.

ComicsDC: What's your favorite thing about DC?

MJ: The Smithsonian

ComicsDC: Least favorite?

MJ: How hard it is to drive through, and how awkward it can be to Metro around if you live outside Metro reach.

ComicsDC: What monument or museum do like to take visitors to?

MJ: Smithsonian!

ComicsDC: How about a favorite local restaurant?

MJ: My favorite local restaurant is, of course, up Columbia way.  There is a little family run sushi restaurant called Hanamura.  Best unagidon ever.

ComicsDC: Do you have a website or blog?

MJ: http://ww.emeraldixia.com . Also http://megamijadeheart.deviantart.com . But I am a notorious net hermit.  Shy until you get me talking.

Saturday, September 22, 2012

Cartoonists at the Library of Congress book festival on Sunday

Craig Thompson, Hope Larson, Raina Telgemeier and David Small. Click through for their times.

Intervention con photos

My Intervention con photos of local creators are online now. These include Chris Flick (above), Dan Nokes, Studio Unseen, Monica H (aka MonMon), and Megami Jadeheart. I missed others though including John Robey. The con continues through tomorrow. I caught one panel today - a fun one with Jennifer Breeden, Danielle Corsetto, Chris Baldwin and Shaenon Garrity on being long-term webcomics creators.

I also bought a Cthulhu Fluxx game.

New York Times graphic novel bestseller list fed by Big Planet Comics

I was in Big Planet Comics Vienna today for Raina Telgemeier's Drama booksigning (I bought 4 - what're you waiting for? She's a guest at the Library of Congress book festival tomorrow) and Nick shared an interesting piece of inside baseball info. Recently 3 of the Big Planet stores - DC, Vienna and College Park - have been reporting their numbers to the New York Times Book Review for their best seller list. These stores aren't superhero heavy so it'll be interesting if they shape the numbers at all.

Intervention Con continues today

I'm heading up in a few minutes, I think.

It's at at the Hilton Washington DC/Rockville in Rockville, MD, from September 21st through September 23rd, a weekend celebration of cyber-culture, geek life, and the creative opportunities of the internet. The event's co-founder, Onezumi Hartstein, said, "[co-founder] James Harknell and I wanted to put together an event that would compliment the existing print-centric conventions – we wanted to showcase the creators who use the Internet as their primary publishing method. We felt that web creators needed their own space, We're giving them that with Intervention." After successful runs in 2010 and 2011, this year will mark Hartstein's third time organizing the event.

The convention also features panels, educational content, children's programming, board and video gaming, an extensive Artist Alley, Live Action Roleplaying, musical performances, and plenty of giveaways. As in past years, there will be a charity auction to benefit the Electronic Frontier Foundation, an international non-profit digital advocacy group that helps to defend civil liberties in the digital space.

Tickets for Intervention 2012 can be bought for the regular price of $45  at the door. More details at  http://www.interventioncon.com


Friday, September 21, 2012

Weldon on Lincoln, the Hypo

The Stinkin' Thinkin' of Young Abe Lincoln
by Glen Weldon
National Public Radio's Monkey See blog September 21, 2012
http://www.npr.org/blogs/monkeysee/2012/09/21/161472843/the-stinkin-thinkin-of-young-abe-lincoln

For the record: Letter to the Editor on comic strips

As far as I can tell, this letter isn't on the Post's website, but appeared in print. The author responds to the Sept 1 letter suggesting Doonesbury move to the editorial page.
 
O'Dell, Mike.  2012.
Comics often wander into politics.
Washington Post (September 15)
 

Intervention con starts today!

It's at at the Hilton Washington DC/Rockville in Rockville, MD, from September 21st through September 23rd, a weekend celebration of cyber-culture, geek life, and the creative opportunities of the internet. The event's co-founder, Onezumi Hartstein, said, "[co-founder] James Harknell and I wanted to put together an event that would compliment the existing print-centric conventions – we wanted to showcase the creators who use the Internet as their primary publishing method. We felt that web creators needed their own space, We're giving them that with Intervention." After successful runs in 2010 and 2011, this year will mark Hartstein's third time organizing the event.

The convention also features panels, educational content, children's programming, board and video gaming, an extensive Artist Alley, Live Action Roleplaying, musical performances, and plenty of giveaways. As in past years, there will be a charity auction to benefit the Electronic Frontier Foundation, an international non-profit digital advocacy group that helps to defend civil liberties in the digital space.

Tickets for Intervention 2012 can be bought for the regular price of $45 afterwards at the door. More details at  http://www.interventioncon.com

The Post reviews new Judge Dredd film

A thriller for fans to judge
By Sean O'Connell
Friday, September 21, 2012

Cartoonists reactions to end of Cul de Sac strip at the Post

'CUL DE SAC' ENDS SUNDAY: Cartoon peers salute Richard Thompson

 

Thursday, September 20, 2012

Big Planet Comics Orbit Newsletter - September 20, 2012





Big Planet Comics

September 20, 2012

Raina Telgemeier signings on Saturday!!

Raina Telgemeier will finally be here on Saturday for two signings, at our Vienna and College Park stores! Raina is the creator of Smile and her new book Drama, both with middle school/early high school protagonists but enjoyable by all! She also adapted 4 of the Babysitters Club books into graphic novels, and has done X-Men comics and more. Her Smile graphic novel just hit #1 on the New York Times bestseller list for graphic novels!!! Her new story, Drama, is all about a young girl named Callie and her time with the drama club at her school, as they put on a new play, and she has to deal with new friends, old crushes, school stress, and more! It's really sweet and fun, you can listen to our review of it on our Podcast 58 (the review of Drama starts at 18:45).

All the information about the signings is below! We hope to see you there!

SPX was the most awesome convention ever, again, so I hope you all got to make it out! We will have a special SPX edition of the podcast for you next week (in addition to our regular one), so yeah two podcasts for you! Plus we got a bunch of great comics from the show now for sale, so stop by and grab some if you missed something. And it was easy to miss something, I know we sure did! Also let us know about any of your favorites that you discovered at SPX.

Feel free to forward on our newsletter, and please send us any comments or mailing list requests to vienna@bigplanetcomics.com

Thanks!
 
- the Big Planet Comics kids


___________________


UPCOMING - September 22 - Raina Telgemeier signing Drama

Raina Telgemeier, creator of the New York Times bestseller Smile, will be appearing at both our Vienna and College Park stores on Saturday, September 22, for her brand new book Drama!

Callie loves theater. And while she would totally try out for her middle school's production of Moon Over Mississippi, she's a terrible singer. Instead she's the set designer for the stage crew, and this year she's determined to create a set worthy of Broadway on a middle-school budget. But how can she, when she doesn't know much about carpentry, ticket sales are down, and the crew members are having trouble working together? Not to mention the onstage AND offstage drama that occurs once the actors are chosen, and when two cute brothers enter the picture, things get even crazier! Following the success of Smile, Raina Telgemeier brings us another graphic novel featuring a diverse set of characters that humorously explores friendship, crushes, and all-around drama!

11am-1pm
426 Maple Ave. East
Vienna, VA 22180
703-242-9412
vienna@bigplanetcomics.com

Vienna facebook event https://www.facebook.com/events/342117065880187/


3pm-5pm
7315 Baltimore Ave.
College Park, MD 20740
301-699-0498
bigplanetcollegepark@yahoo.com

College Park facebook event https://www.facebook.com/events/402620083138170/

The Hypo: The Melancholic Young Lincoln HC

by Noah Van Sciver

A fantastically researched look at the early days of Abraham Lincoln, when he struggled to establish himself in a new city as a lawyer, politician, and courter of Mary Todd. Failures in all these areas led to a dark period of illness and depression. Great dialogue, vibrant cartooning, and intense moments that I'd never heard of Lincoln's life! Fascinating!

Sword of Sorcery #0

by Christy Marx, Tony Bedard, Aaron Lopresti and Jesus Saíz

This book includes a main story, Amethyst, Princess of Gemworld (a relaunch of the old kids' comic from the '80s), in which a young girl is trained by her mother to return to the fantasy world she is a princess of, and a backup story of a scifi post-apocalyptic Beowulf! Amethyst is nicely updated to a modern story except for one off-putting character defining moment, while Beowulf is violent and insane.

Winter Soldier 1: The Longest Winter SC

 
by Ed Brubaker and Butch Guice
 

Delving into the Soviet past of the Winter Soldier, Bucky discovers that the agents he trained are active again, and it is up to him and Black Widow to stop them! Unfortunately, this leads them into a confrontation with Dr. Doom! Most intrigue and action from the master!

Ghost #0

by Kelly Sue Deconnick and Phil Noto
 
Collecting the 3 part story from Dark Horse Presents to kick off a new 4 issue Ghost miniseries! Two TV ghosthunters find a real ghost, a mysterious woman in white, who has mysterious powers and begins to manifest in our world. When a group of gangsters come after the device that summoned her, they are all sent on a mission to find out who she is!

The Secret of the Stone Frog HC

by David Nytra

In this strange tale, two young children wake in a strange fantastic world and must find their way back home, in a mix of Little Nemo in Slumberland and Alice in Wonderland! Luckily talking stone frog statues guide the way, but monsters and dangerous tests are all along the road, from talking animals, giant bees, to threatening thieves! Amazing detailed art. 

all ages!

John Carter: The God of Mars SC

by Sam Humphries and Ramon Perez

Adapting the second Burroughs novel into comics form, this rousing adventure tale is one of the best of the whole John Carter series, as he returns to Mars for the second time. The exciting part about this adaptation is that it is drawn by Ramon Perez, the artist of last year's astoundingly great Tale of Sand! Great adventure, great art!

Neon Super Gladiator #1

by Andy Kettler
 
Our own Big Planet Comics employee Andy Kettler has a new comic out, the first part of his scifi battle story of the future! In the city of Urbania, kids playing the Neon Super Gladiator video game are secretly analyzed by the mysterious Mother Board, when one player named Apollo is noticed! Hyper detailed art in the vein of Darrow.

Penguin: Pain and Prejudice SC

by Gregg Hurwitz and Szymon Kudranski
 
The origin story of Oswald Cobblepot! A dark and intense look at his early days and rise to crimelord, as well as explaining how his personality formed and how tough he became to survive. A great but dark tale.
Adventures in Cartooning Christmas Special
Asterix Wheres Asterix? SC
Daredevil by Mark Waid Vol 3 HC
Dark Country HC
Gambit #1 2nd Ptg
Godzilla Half Century War #2 (of 5)
Harker Vol 1 Book of Solomon HC
Harvest #1 (of 5) 2nd Ptg
Lobster Johnson Caput Mortuum #1
Mr. Big: A Tale of Pond Life SC
Punisher by Greg Rucka Vol 2 SC
Revival #3
Spider-Man Spider-Island SC
Venom Circle of Four SC
Walking Dead #102
Womanthology Space #1

Big Planet Comics Podcast #59
"Guardians of the Gunnlaxy"
This week, Kevin, Nick, and Jared jam on it, and we review a bunch of new comics! Download now or subscribe on iTunes!
 
PODCAST REVIEWS:

Dr. Strange: Season One HC by Greg Pak and Emma Ríos
Ghost #0 by Kelly Sue Deconnick and Phil Noto
The Hypo: The Melancholic Young Lincoln HC by Noah Van Sciver
The Secret of the Stone Frog HC by David Nytra
Stumptown 2: The Case of the Baby in the Velvet Case #1 by Greg Rucka and Matthew Southworth
Sword of Sorcery #0 by Christy Marx, Tony Bedard, Aaron Lopresti and Jesus Saíz
Team Seven #0 by Justin Jordan and Jesus Merino
Trail of Steel 1441 A.D. SC by Marcos Mateu-Mestre

Send us questions to podcast@bigplanetcomics.com or leave a voicemail at 1-703-539-CAST! (1-703-539-2278)
 

9/22 - Raina Telgemeier
Signing Drama
11am-1pm
426 Maple Ave. East
Vienna, VA 22180
703-242-9412
vienna@bigplanetcomics.com

Signing Drama
3pm-5pm
7315 Baltimore Ave.
College Park, MD 20740
301-699-0498
bigplanetcollegepark@yahoo.com

9/29 - Gordon Harris
Signing Pedestrian
3pm-5pm
426 Maple Ave. East
Vienna, VA 22180
703-242-9412
vienna@bigplanetcomics.com

10/27 - District Comics
4pm-6pm
1520 U St. NW
Washington, DC 20009
202-342-1061
dc@bigplanetcomics.com

11/3 - Ben Hatke
Signing Legends of Zita the Spacegirl
11am-1pm
426 Maple Ave. East
Vienna, VA 22180
703-242-9412
vienna@bigplanetcomics.com

Signing Legends of Zita the Spacegirl
3pm-5pm
7315 Baltimore Ave.
College Park, MD 20740
301-699-0498
bigplanetcollegepark@yahoo.com

New Next Week 9/26

(Let us know if you want any of these!)
 
Adventure Time #8
Alien Illustrated Story Limited Signed Artist's Edition HC
All Star Western #0
Amazing Spider-Man #694
American Vampire #31
American Vampire Vol 3 SC
American Vampire Vol 4 HC
Angel & Faith #14
Anita Blake Vampire Hunter: Circus Of Damned Book 3 Scoundrel SC
Aquaman #0
Archie & Friends Double Digest #20
Archie Best Of Harry Lucey vol 2 HC
Archie Double Digest #233
Asterix Omnibus Vol 6 HC
Astonishing X-Men #54
Avatar Last Airbender vol 3 The Promise Part 3 SC
Axe Cop President of the World #3 (Of 3)
Barbara GN
Bart Simpson Comics #75
Batman #8 2nd Ptg
Batman Incorporated #0
Batman The Dark Knight #0
Before Watchmen Ozymandias #3 (Of 6)
Black Panther Man Without Fear: Fear Itself SC
BPRD Hell On Earth Return of the Master #2 (Of 5)
Captain America And Black Widow #637
Captain Marvel #2 2nd Ptg
Captain Marvel #4
Crossed Badlands #14
Dancer #5
Daredevil By Brubaker And Lark Ultimate Collection Book 3 SC
Dark Matter Vol 1 Rebirth SC
Deadpool #61
Debris #3 (Of 4)
Elephantmen #43
Elric The Balance Lost #12 (Of 12)
Erstwhile From Tales Of Brothers Grimm HC
Fear Itself: Uncanny X-Men SC
FF #22
Flash #0
Flash vol 2 The Road To Flashpoint SC
Fury: My War Gone By #6
Fury Of Firestorm The Nuclear Men #0
Gambit #3
Gasoline Alley Vol 1 HC
GI Joe A Real American Hero #182
Godstorm #0
Gold Digger #142
Goon #42
Happy #1 (Of 4)
Hawken #6 (Of 6)
Hellraiser #18
Hero Worship #3 (Of 6)
Higher Earth #5
Hit-Girl #3 (Of 5)
I, Vampire #0
Incredible Hulk #14
Invincible #95
Invincible Iron Man #525
Joe Kubert Tarzan Of The Apes Artist Edition HC
Journey Into Mystery #644
Jugheads Double Digest #185
Justice League #12 2nd Ptg
Justice League Dark #0
Kevin Keller #4
Kevin Smith Bionic Man #13
Lobo Portrait Of A Bastich SC New Ptg
Mars Attacks #4
Mars Attacks HC
Marvel Universe Ultimate Spider-Man #6
Marvels Avengers Avengers Initiative Digest SC
Miles Edgeworth Ace Attorney vol 2 SC
The Milkman Murders HC
Mind Mgmt #5
Mind The Gap #5
Marvel Masterworks Invincible Iron Man Vol 2 SC
National Comics: Rose And Thorn #1
New Deadwardians #7 (Of 8)
Phantom Lady #2 (Of 4)
Popeye #5
Prophet #29
Punisher #16
Queen Sonja #32
Rachel Rising #11
Red Lanterns #0
Saga Of The Swamp Thing Book 2 SC
Savage Hawkman #0
Secret Avengers #31
Shadow Annual #1
Showcase Presents Amethsyt Vol 1 SC
Simpsons Treehouse Of Horror #18
Sixth Gun #25
Skullkickers #18
Snake Eyes & Storm Shadow #17
Sonic The Hedgehog Select Vol 6 SC
Space Punisher #3 (Of 4)
Spider-Man Lizard: No Turning Back HC
Star Trek The Next Generation/Doctor Who Assimilation #5
Star Wars Darth Maul Death Sentence #3 (Of 4)
Steed And Mrs. Peel #1
Stitched #8
Super Dinosaur #14
Superman #0
Superman Family Adventures #5
Takio #3
Talon #0
Teen Titans #0
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Ongoing #14
Tellos Colossal vol 2 HC
The Spider #5
Tower Chronicles Vol 1 (Of 4) GN
Transformers More Than Meets Eye #9
Ultimate Comics Ultimates #16 UWS
Ultimate Comics X-Men By Nick Spencer Vol 1 SC
Voodoo #0
Voodoo Vol 1 What Lies Beneath SC
Walking Dead Vol 8 HC
Wasteland Vol 7 SC
Westward #1
Where's My Shoggoth
Winter Soldier #11
Witchblade #160
Wolverine #313
Wolverine and the X-Men #17
Wolverine and the X-Men by Jason Aaron Prem vol 3 HC
X-Men #36
X-Men Legacy #274
X-Treme X-Men #4
Yotsuba&! Vol 11 SC
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Cul de Sac replaced by Grand Avenue

As Richard Thompson ends his strip, we'll see more of these articles, but Grand Avenue won with 22 votes.  See your vote does matter!

Briefs: Grand Avenue is new AD comic
September 19, 2012
http://www.appeal-democrat.com/news/avenue-119562-grand-votes.html


SPX photographs now online

101_4338 Lost Art books publisher Joe Procopio

Joe Procopio (with Ellen Levy), publisher of Lost Art Books based in Silver Spring, MD.

I didn't take too many pictures this year, but I've put my Small Press Expo photos up at Flickr now, including an excellent original sketch by Gilbert Hernandez (that I didn't commission but couldn't resist).

The Post editorializes on Islam cartoons

There's no place for censorship-by-riot [in print as Censorship By Riot, p. A15]
By Charles Lane,  The Washington Post September 20 2012 

Washington Post on latest Islam cartoons

There's an Associated Press article in today's print edition on page A7. A longer followup AP article is here.
 
Online at The Post only is
 
Charlie Hebdo cartoons spark debate over free speech and Islamophobia
By Olga Khazan
Washington Post blogPost September 19 2012

Tuesday, September 18, 2012

Public Radio International interviews Kal and Patrick Chappatte

This was also recorded at the editorial cartoonist con at George Washington U

Cartoonists Wrestle with the Freedom to Insult
By Joyce Hackel
Public Radio International's The World (September 14, 2012)
http://www.theworld.org/2012/09/cartoonists-freedom-to-insult/

Kal interviewed in DC last weekend

Political Satire: Cartooning President Obama, Mitt Romney, and the rise of 3D animation

By Jake Tapper, Richard Coolidge & Sherisse Pham

Political Punch blog September 18 2012

http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/power-players-abc-news/political-satire-cartooning-president-obama-mitt-romney-rise-111626281.html


Here's Kal at the Editorial Cartoonist convention at George Washington University.

Kal on TV, Radio and In Person!

From Kal:

I have some news that thought you may find of interest.

I have just returned a cartoonist's convention in DC  (fun as you can imagine). While there, I did various media interview's including this video on ABC and Yahoo.com with White House correspondent Jake Tapper


I was honored to appear on Public radio's "the World" last week with another great cartoonist colleague, Patrick Chappatte. You can hear our interview here.


For those of you in the greater Baltimore area, I will be giving a public lecture this Thursday evening at Towson University. You can learn mere about it here.



Many thanks!

Kal




The iKAL iPhone App is now available at the iTunes store.


NPR's Talk of the Nation on The Influencing Machine

TotN comes out of DC, so I should start linking to their stories...

...Josh Neufeld did the cartooning for this.

What 'The Influencing Machine' Teaches College Kids
Neal Conan
Talk of the Nation September 17, 2012
http://www.npr.org/2012/09/17/161294597/what-the-influencing-machine-teaches-college-kids
http://pd.npr.org/anon.npr-mp3/npr/totn/2012/09/20120917_totn_04.mp3
http://www.npr.org/templates/transcript/transcript.php?storyId=161294597

Richard Thompson's gold Ignatz Award speech at SPX

Richard Thompson's Statement Accepting A Special Ignatz
Tom Spurgeon
September 18, 2012
http://www.comicsreporter.com/index.php/richard_thompsons_statement_accepting_a_special_ignatz/

Philip Nel on SPX


Clear Lines and Comics Luminaries: A Report from SPX
Nine Kinds of Pie: Philip Nel's Blog
http://www.philnel.com/2012/09/17/spx-2/

Publishers Weekly on SPX success

SPX Smashes Sales Records
By Heidi MacDonald
Sep 17, 2012
http://www.publishersweekly.com/pw/by-topic/book-news/comics/article/53994-spx-smashes-sales-records.html
   

PR: SEAS Superheroes Alert


GW's School of Engineering and Applied Science publishes a new episode of IMPACT: The SEAS Superheroes.  Today, we published our latest adventure, featuring SafetyMan, which you can view at www.seas.gwu.edu/IMPACT

 

Donna Lewis on Tall Tales Radio

Donna tells me: There's a link up to the video at my Reply All comic strip website.  I love talking to Tom Racine.  He makes me laugh.  He's really fun.  And funny.

That's PRESIDENT Captain America, to you

Marvel elects our next president: Captain America [in print as Square-jawed hero for an Oval Office, p. C1, 9]
By Michael Cavna,
Washington Post September 18, 2012

Monday, September 17, 2012

Sherman's Lagoon goes to Washington

Cartoonist Jim Toomey is an advocate for the oceans, and he's sent his Sherman's Lagoon characters to Washington. They arrived last Saturday (having magically gotten legs and lungs), and today Sherman met with oceanographer Sylvia Earle at National Geographic.

Baltimore Comic-Con 2012 pictures

I only took a few pictures this year, but here's some photographs of Team Cul de Sac members as well as cosplayers at Baltimore Comic-Con - groups that rarely mingle thankfully. Who knows what kind of children would result...

You can hear the Team Cul de Sac panel here.

Sunday, September 16, 2012

SPX Day 2!

The SPX con yesterday was great - lots of people, lots of great guests, and lots of energy.

SPX is in North Bethesda, 2 blocks from the White Flint metro on the Red Line.

http://www.spxpo.com/

Marriott Bethesda North Hotel &
Conference Center
5701 Marinelli Road.
North Bethesda, MD 20852
301-822-9200

Saturday, September 15, 2012

National Academy of Engineering sponsors Bleeker comic strip

"Bleeker: The Rechargeable Dog" Promotes Engineering Education in New Storyline

KING FEATURES AND THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF ENGINEERING
TO PROMOTE ENGINEERING EDUCATION IN
"BLEEKER THE RECHARGEABLE DOG" COMIC STRIP

Special Two-Week Storyline Debuts in Newspapers and Online from Sept. 17-29, 2012

 

 New York, Sept. 13, 2012 – Starting on Monday, Sept. 17, the digital-themed comic strip, BLEEKER: THE RECHARGEABLE DOG, in partnership with the National Academy of Engineering (NAE), will launch a special two-week comic series that shines a spotlight on engineers and highlights the growing importance of engineering on future innovation. A new strip from the storyline will run in newspapers in the U.S. and Canada and on the NAE website at www.nae.edu and on www.BleekerComics.com.

Just like students across the country, the comic strip's characters, Lila and Skip, are back in school. These two fifth graders are assigned an early class project that focuses on perhaps the least talked-about part of STEM (science, technology, engineering and math) education—engineering. With Skip's electronic pet Bleeker tagging along, Skip and Lila learn what engineers do and how they might make positive impacts in the world by pursuing engineering as a career path.

Created by cartoonist Jonathan Mahood and distributed by King Features Syndicate, BLEEKER: THE RECHARGEABLE DOG is a funny strip about the friendship that exists between a boy and his dog, all with a contemporary 21st century twist. Bleeker is a rechargeable dog—he comes with his own battery pack and touch screen belly. Bleeker is a walking cell phone, music player, camera, printer, smoke detector, global positioning system and scanner all rolled into one user friendly device. He is like a typical canine, in that he can play fetch and do tricks like any other dog…except he needs to be recharged at the end of the day.

"Since I draw a comic strip about robots, I was really excited to join forces with the National Academy of Engineering and create an engineering-focused storyline in Bleeker," said Mahood. "It was a chance to highlight, for readers young and old, the essential role engineering plays in our daily lives and how it will help shape our future. On a personal note, my dad was an electrical engineer and as kids we really had no idea what he did at his job all day. Creating these comics helped me to reconnect and realize what a creative and hands-on profession he had."

The inspiration for Bleeker himself came partly from an engineering innovation with wide-ranging impact, because he is a combination of Mahood's favorite companions: his dog and his iPod.

On Sept. 21, the BLEEKER comic strip will feature a mention of the NAE Grand Challenges for Engineering. These game-changing opportunities, which are identified by an international committee of some of this generation's leading technological thinkers including Google CEO Larry Page, NOAA head Jane Luchenco, Nobel Prize-winner Mario Molina, genome pioneer J. Craig Venter, and former U.S. Secretary of Defense William Perry among others, are proving to be inspirational in education through activities like the NAE Grand Challenges Scholars Program taking root at colleges and universities across the nation.

"By opening young people's eyes—even through fun avenues like the 'BLEEKER' comic strip—to ways engineers make a difference in the world, we are sure to attract a more diverse group of the best and brightest students to pursue this career path and help drive our nation's innovation engine," said NAE senior communications officer Randy Atkins. "It's great to see a female character like Lila excitedly leading her friends on a path to learning more about engineering."

The "BLEEKER" series utilizes research from the NAE's Changing the Conversation report, which identifies messages likely to promote the public understanding of engineering.

BLEEKER: THE RECHARGEABLE DOG
is distributed to newspapers, websites and mobile applications by King Features Syndicate, and can be read daily on more than 100 Comics Kingdom sites, www.DailyINK.com/features/Bleeker and www.Bleekercomics.com.

About The U.S. National Academy of Engineering

The mission of the National Academy of Engineering is to advance the wellbeing of the nation by promoting a vibrant engineering profession and by marshalling the expertise and insights of eminent engineers to provide independent advice to the federal government on matters involving engineering and technology. The NAE is part of the National Academies, which also include the National Academy of Sciences, the Institute of Medicine, and the National Research Council.

About Jonathan Mahood

After years of sending cartoon submissions to newspaper syndicates (and receiving the corresponding rejection letters) Jonathan decided to launch his first comic online in July 2006 called "Hoover: The Rechargeable Dog." The strip combined his two favorite companions: his dog and his iPod. In 2007, the comic was picked up by GoComics and Mahood renamed it BLEEKER, after his grandfather's middle name. Since then the comic has built a strong daily audience, attracted interest for an animated television series and has been translated weekly for Die Zeit, Germany's largest national weekly newspaper. In 2010, BLEEKER: THE RECHARGEABLE DOG was signed by King Features Syndicate for worldwide syndication. Mahood, his dog and his iPod, live in a small town north of Toronto.

About King Features Syndicate

King Features Syndicate is a member of Hearst Entertainment and Syndication Group, which combines Hearst Corporation's network partnerships, television programming activities, and newspaper syndication and merchandise licensing operations. King Features is the world's premier distributor of comics, columns, editorial cartoons, puzzles and games, distributing in print and online some 150 features to nearly 5,000 newspapers and other outlets around the globe. It is one of the largest and most experienced organizations in merchandise licensing and entertainment. It represents some of the most recognizable global brands, including Popeye the Sailor Man, Olive Oyl and Betty Boop. For more information, please visit http://www.kingfeatures.com.

You say #!&% Cartoons!! - I say Damn! Cartoons


The American Association of Editorial Cartoonists has opened its annual convention to the public for the first time and called it either #!&% Cartoons!! or Damn! Cartoons. Local cartoonists Matt Wuerker, Anne Telnaes, Tom Toles, and Nate Beeler will be attending. Also appearing are Bob Staake who draws for the Washington Post, Kevin 'Kal' Kallaugher from our sister city of Baltimore along with New Yorker art editor Francoise Mouly and many others from the dwindling field. Censored Malaysian cartoonist Zunar will be presented an award by the Cartoonists Rights Network (which is based in NoVa). On Saturday, the day is filled with chalk talks where a cartoonist draws while speaking. At least 12 Pulitzer Prize winners will be there, so bring your autograph book.
 
September 14-15, George Washington University, $10.

Friday, September 14, 2012

DC papers on Satrapi's Chicken with Plums and re-Finding Nemo

Love and death in prerevolutionary Iran
Kelly Jane Torrance
The Washington Examiner September 14, 2012
http://washingtonexaminer.com/love-and-death-in-prerevolutionary-iran/article/2507937#.UFPkqFFceSo

Enjoying a feast
By Ann Hornaday
Friday, September 14, 2012
http://www.washingtonpost.com/gog/movies/chicken-with-plums-poulet-aux-prunes,1228812/critic-review.html

Dreams of a Father
'Chicken With Plums' embraces the light and darkness of love
By Shauna Miller
 September 14, 2012          
http://www.expressnightout.com/2012/09/dreams-of-a-father/

and a bit on 3-D'ing Finding Nemo:

Don't Touch the Art
By Kristen Page-Kirby
September 14, 2012
http://www.expressnightout.com/2012/09/dont-touch-the-art/

Must-sea?: 'Finding Nemo' returns in 3-D
By Jen Chaney
September 14, 2012
http://www.washingtonpost.com/gog/movies/finding-nemo-3d,1216209/critic-review.html





Comic Riffs polls editorial cartoonists

OBAMA vs. ROMNEY: Whom would the nation's cartoonists rather satirize? The winner is . . .
By Michael Cavna
Comic Riffs September 14 2012
http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/comic-riffs/post/obama-vs-romney-whom-would-the-nations-cartoonists-rather-satirize-the-winner-is/2012/09/13/eae19e62-fd51-11e1-a31e-804fccb658f9_blog.html#pagebreak

Thursday, September 13, 2012

The Post on children's how-to-cartoon books

With pictures, tell your own stories [online as Graphic novels and comic books your parents won't object to]
By Tracy Grant,
Washington Post September 12, 2012, p. C10
http://www.washingtonpost.com/lifestyle/kidspost/graphic-novels-and-comic-books-your-parents-wont-object-to/2012/09/11/c471fef4-f2e1-11e1-adc6-87dfa8eff430_story.html

Meelee at Malaysia, by Joe Sutliff

"Representatives of Amnesty International, Cartoonists Rights Network International (CRNI) and the AAEC joined Malaysian cartoonist Zunar for a demonstration in front of the Malaysian Embassy in Northeast Washington on Wednesday evening. The protest was to draw attention to a lack of freedom of the press in Malaysia. Mr. Zunar is in Washington DC to receive an award from the AAEC for courage in political cartooning. Representatives of the embassy came out and spoke with Zunar for a few minutes through the embassy gate. Extra police were on hand, but the protest remained peaceful."

Matt Wuerker and the fuzz
Matt Wuerker holds sign as Zunar speaks
Matt Wuerker in rear, Iran's Nik Kowsar in front of his sign, CRNI's Bro Russell (in blue shirt w/ beard), Zunar in yellow shirt, CRNI's Drew Rougier-Chapman in blue shirt and blazer.



Project Update #17: BLOOP: Part One by Steve Conley


Project Update #17: Two more cartoonists announced!

Posted by Steve Conley Like
Three days to go and we're getting ever closer to our first stretch goal! I'm excited to announce the addition of two more contributions to the BLOOP jam print:
  • Zuzu by Nick Galifianakis: Nick is America's premiere relationship cartoonist and one of my oldest pals in cartooning. His latest book is If You Loved Me, You'd Think This Was Cute: Uncomfortably True Cartoons About You
  • Action Cat and Adventure Bug by Art Baltazar. Art is one of the nicest people I've ever met in comics and I love, love, love his work. Art, and his cohort Franco, recently opened their own comics shop called AW YEAH Comics.
Nick and Art join James A. Owen, Batton Lash, Andy Runton, Marty Baumann, Jamar Nicholas, Rich Faber, John Gallagher, Jimmy Gownley, Carolyn Belefski, Rick Veitch, Frank Cho, Dean Haspiel, Graham Nolan, Jerry Ordway and Scott Christian Sava!
These last three days will be exciting for sure! :D
-- Steve


    Warren Bernard of SPX interviewed

    CR Newsmaker Interview: Warren Bernard
    by Tom Spurgeon.
    September 13, 2012
    http://www.comicsreporter.com/index.php/the_never_ending_four_color_festival_cons_shows_events091312/

    Satrapi's Chicken with Plums reviewed in City Paper

    Chicken With Plums Directed by Vincent Paronnaud and Marjane Satrapi A violin breaks, devastating its owner. And yet, we laugh.  [in print as 'The Dread Violin'].
     By Tricia Olszewski • September 14, 2012