Wednesday, September 02, 2015
Tuesday, September 01, 2015
Teresa Logan on Internet radio show POSTPONED DUE TO ILLNESS
The Savage & Starbuck Show
Hosted by Joie Savage and SB Starbuck
An Hour With Teresa Roberts Logan
POSTPONED DUE TO ILLNESS
|
She's made a living with humor for several decades, on page and on stage.
Teresa writes and draws humor for publication, for standup comedy, for storytelling, for cartoons . . . as well as spooky stuff, and provides content for publishing, animation, books, and product.
As a professional artist and illustrator, she has done thousands of paintings and drawings, kabillions (math!) of cartoons and jokes for products such as animations, cocktail napkins, partyware, tissues, and greeting cards. She was nominated for a Reuben Award by the National Cartoonists Society for her greeting cards. Currently she's working on a graphic novel, HAINT BLUE, (an autobiographical supernatural story), some horror short stories, and a web comic, FOG OF WORRY.
Books which contain her funny stuff (cartoons and columns): "The Older I Get, The Less I Care" (Andrews McMeel Publishing), "Laughing Out Loud" (Hallmark Gift Books), "Humor for a Sister's Heart" (Howard Publishing), "Mug of Woe," "All Woe Great and Small," "Woe of Dating," (just released) "Wreck the Halls," (Mug of Woe Publishing).
Teresa has done a lot of standup comedy and storytelling, through such venues as: HBO, Comedy Channel, A&E, Catch A Rising Star, Gotham Comedy Club, The Metropolitan Room NYC, Zanies, and Comedy Works . . . and was an opening act for Jerry Seinfeld, Ellen DeGeneres, Kevin Nealon, Dana Carvey, Drew Carey, and Paula Poundstone, as well as many other famous and not–so-famous funny people. "Rich Jeni called me 'the Meryl Streep of comedy' and I thought that was so cool that he loved my dialects and accents so much. But one day, when he found out that's what I thought, he laughed really hard and told me, 'No, I meant you have the same NOSE!'"
Nate Powell talks about March
CBR TV: Working on "March" Has Changed Artist Nate Powell
Comic Riffs talks to a syndicate censor ... editor
The Comics Taste Test: Dilbert, 'Uranus-Hertz' & the birth of the substitute strip
Washington Post Comic Riffs blog September 1 2015
http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/comic-riffs/wp/2015/09/01/the-comics-taste-test-dilbert-uranus-hertz-the-birth-of-the-substitute-strip/
Fwd: Small Press Expo Announces Guests Brandon Graham and Phoebe Gloeckner
|
Sept 16: "Sequential Art in Science Communication” by David Clarke
https://gnsi.org/event/meeting/gnsi-dc-sept-16th-sequential-art-science-communication
Guild of Natural Science Illustrators
PRESENTATION: "Sequential Art in Science Communication" by David Clarke
DATE & TIME: Wednesday, Sept. 16, 2015 at 5:30 p.m.
The word "comics" might bring to mind well-thumbed copies of Scrooge McDuck, Spiderman, or the newspaper's Sunday funny pages, but today sequential art is being used to communicate and teach subjects such as science, medicine and history. David Clarke is creating comics about the history of science. His first large scale project is a graphic novel of the voyage of "Captain" James Cook and Joseph Banks to Tahiti for the Transit of Venus and their subsequent travels around the South Pacific mapping New Zealand and the east coast of Australia. David will describe the development process – what's involved - in creating a graphic novel.
David Clarke, former GNSI DC President, is the CEO of his own studio. He creates animations, illustrations, comics and graphics and works with a small programming team to create interactive learning objects for the university's online classrooms. He is an Adjunct faculty member of Northern Virginia Community College and a multimedia/graphic artist at the University of Maryland University College. He has a BFA from the Rhode Island School of Design and an MFA from the Academy of Art University, based in San Francisco.
LOCATION:
Smithsonian Natural History Museum
10th St. & Constitution Ave., Washington, DC.
Wait for an escort in the Constitution Avenue lobby between 5:30 and 6:10 p.m. (about every 15 minutes)
EVENING'S SCHEDULE:
— 5:30 p.m. for snacks and socializing (Please bring a food item to share, or $3.00 for the donation jar.)
— 6:00 p.m. Business and announcements
— 6:10 p.m. (approx.) Presentation begins
World War II cartoons from the Navy's medical historian's office
The Navy's Bureau of Medicine and Surgery's historian's office holds a collection of newsletters and newspapers from various naval hospitals. U.S. Naval Hospital Aiea Heights had two issues and 2 fragments of an issue that are now online at the Medical Heritage Library. Here's the cartoons from them.
Robert Woodcock was one of the best of them and had two in the November 11, 1944 issue, and is featured in an article here.
Virgil Partch, aka VIP, was one of the best cartoonists and went on to a serious postwar career in cartooning. This is from December 15, 1945.
Al Santamauro (Nov. 11, 1943) and Bill Pietsch (Dec. 12, 1945) both seem to have disappeared from the cartooning world.
PR: Niso Ramponi book from Lost Art Books
KREMOS: The Lost Art of Niso Ramponi Vols. 1& 2 are now officially available for pre-order from our website. Here's our book trailer.
Monday, August 31, 2015
Comic Riffs talks to The Post's comics censor.... editor
The Comics Taste Test: The thankless task of drawing the funnies' red lines
Washington Post Comic Riffs blog August 31 2015
http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/comic-riffs/wp/2015/08/31/the-comics-taste-test-the-thankless-task-of-drawing-the-funnies-red-lines/
PR: The Sevara novel is FREE today only (Monday, August 31)
by Damian Wampler
Yep, that's right. The novel, which tells about Sevara's childhood and how she got her powers, is on Amazon now, and it's free. You can download it tonight until midnight Pacific time, so you still have a few hours. Here's a link to the book: http://amzn.com/B0115CWE2S
Here's a video that talks a little about the novel. Get a copy before the deal ends.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W1w26OtN9HsFrank Cho continues girly art
Outlasting another City Paper editor
Small Press Expo Sponsors Keith Knight, Miss Lasko-Gross and Diane Noomin at the National Book Festival
|
Sept 5: National Book Festival cartoonist appearances (updated)
National Book Festival: Graphic Novels
http://www.washingtonpost.com/entertainment/books/national-book-festival-graphic-novels/2015/08/28/f0f4eab4-30a4-11e5-8353-1215475949f4_story.html
3 evening panels on political cartoons, women and comics and Stephan Pastis
National Book Festival: Picture Books
http://www.washingtonpost.com/entertainment/books/national-book-festival-picture-books/2015/08/27/ea79529c-309f-11e5-8353-1215475949f4_story.html
3 animators, including Christian Robinson, Cale Atkinson, William Joyce in the morning and graphic novelist Dan Santat at 4 pm.
Children
https://www.washingtonpost.com/graphics/entertainment/2015-national-book-festival/
Lunch Lady artist Jarrett J. Krosoczka and graphic novelists Cece Bell and Jennifer Holm.
Teens
Michael Buckley
Speaking at 2:00 p.m. – 2:30 p.m. (Sept. 5, 2015)
New Yorker illustrator Peter de Sève on his Book Festival poster design
2015 National Book Festival poster by Peter de SèvePeter De Sève will talk about his work at 10 a.m. and sign copies of his poster at 11 a.m.
Sept 16: THE LEGEND OF ZELDA: SYMPHONY OF THE GODDESSES at Strathmore
Music from the animated video game will be in Maryland at the Strathmore. Details at http://zelda-symphony.com/
Sunday, August 30, 2015
International Ink: The GNs of August
The recent mails have brought some good ones.
Sunny Side Up
by Jennifer L. Holm and Matthew Holm
Scholastic
Following the lives of kids whose older brother's delinquent behavior has thrown their family into chaos, Sunny Side Up is at once a compelling "problem" story and a love letter to the comic books that help the protagonist make sense of her world.
The Amazon description isn't really accurate - Sunny Lewin is sent off to Florida to stay with her grandfather in a retirement community instead of taking a family vacation, and she doesn't know why she's being punished like this. She makes friends with the son of one of the staff members, and eventually finds out that her parents are dealing with drying her older brother out. This is one of the best stories I've read this year.
Hilo Book 1: The Boy Who Crashed to Earth
by Judd Winick
Random House
I'm also a big fan of Judd Winick, and it was a pleasure to see him return to the light humor that characterized his comic book Barry Ween, Boy Genius. A young boy appears to have crashed, naked into a suburban neighborhood where he's found by D.J., a boy who has a big family but no friends. The boy, Hilo, has no idea who he is, or where he came from but soon ends up fighting giant robot monsters that are also landing like he did. Heavily-influenced by Bill Watterson and Calvin & Hobbes, this series is worth reading by adults and kids.
Space Dumplins
by Craig ThompsonThe Comic Book Story of Beer: The World's Favorite Beverage from 7000 BC to Today's Craft Brewing Revolution
by Jonathan Hennessey, Mike Smith, Aaron McConnellA full-color, lushly illustrated graphic novel that recounts the many-layered past and present of beer through dynamic pairings of pictures and meticulously researched insight into the history of the world's favorite brew.
Democracy
by Alecos Papadatos, Abraham Kawa, Annie Di Donna
Bloomsbury
Great Showdowns: The Revenge
by Scott CampbellThe Art of Regular Show
by Shannon O'LearyThe Regular Show came on the air after my daughter stopped watching the Cartoon Network. Still I'm a sucker for behind-the-scenes art books, and I own the Fluxx game. I may get one of the neighborhood kids to give me 500 words on this though. The Emmy Award-winning Regular Show, created by JG Quintel, is a jewel in the Cartoon Network crown with over 100 million viewers globally. The series follows the hilarious and surreal adventures of blue jay Mordecai and his best friend, Rigby the raccoon, as they make their days working at a local park anything but regular. Mordecai and Rigby are joined by their boss Benson, an explosively angry gumball machine, yeti groundskeeper Skips, loveable lollipop man Pops and other weird and wonderful friends. This is the world of polar-bear portals and demonic hot-dogs where adventure can be found in the most surprising places.
Two other books I've read, after funding them on Kickstarter, are worth mentioning.
Comic Book People 2: Photographs from the 1990s
by Jackie EstradaKevin and Paulina signed Zodiac Starforce
Friday, August 28, 2015
Sept 18: Fantom Comics Hangout with Brandon Graham & Hang Dai
- at 6:00pm
- Fantom Comics2010 P St NW, Washington, District of Columbia 20036
- Invited by Esther N. Kim
Our featured guests will be BRANDON GRAHAM (Island, 8house, Prophet) and the NYC art collective Hang Dai Editions, featuring Dean Haspiel, Christa Cassano, Gregory Benton, and Josh Neufeld. In addition, FAREL DALRYMPLE (The Wrenchies, It Will All Hurt, Prophet) will be in attendance! Stay tuned for more featured guest updates.
There'll be booze, snacks, and a generally good time. If you're visiting from out of town for SPX and you're in Bethesda, we're a quick hop and a skip into DC on the Red Line--Fantom is walking distance from the Dupont Circle station. It's gonna be a whale of a party...
Thursday, August 27, 2015
PR: Authors Debuting Books at Small Press Expo 2015
|
Flugennock's Latest'n'Greatest: "Leave Bernie Alone!"
http://sinkers.org/stage/?p=1772
Looks like "Progressive" America is still yelling for a WAAAAHHHHmbulance after a Bernie Sanders media event was busted up by #BlackLivesMatter. After months of Sanders failing to address the ongoing wave of racist police terrorism, #BLM took it on themselves to bring it up in Seattle -- much to the consternation of lily-white "Progressive" America.
Never mind that Sanders -- along with the rest of Liberal and "Progressive" America -- happily got on board with Bill Clinton's brutal assault on the Serbian people in the Spring of 1999. Never mind that after Nineleven™, Sanders just as happily voted to fund the assaults on the people of Afghanistan and the liberty and dignity of US citizens by the Department of Homeland Security. Never mind that Sanders has had little problem voting to fund Israeli barbarity in Palestine and the coup government in the Ukraine. Never mind that Sanders lobbied heavily for a slice of war machine pork barrel in Vermont in the form of a USAF F-35 base.
Never mind all that; "Progressive" America honestly still thinks that Sanders can bring this country the kind of revolutionary change it needs, so when somebody comes along -- especially black somebodies -- to call him out on his hypocrisies, all "Progressive" America seems to care about is that they're making Bernie look bad. "Why don't you disrupt Republican events?" they whine, predictably. "Why don't you disrupt Hillary's events?" they complain bitterly, crying, shrieking like that Chris Crocker kid in the infamous "Leave Britney Alone" video.
Mike Flugennock, flugennock at sinkers dot org
Political Cartoons: www.sinkers.org
Compleating Cul de Sac is 30% off today
Compleating Cul de Sac is 30% off - Get 30% off all print books when you use code SAVE30 at checkout. Ends August 30.
Order it at https://www.lulu.com/shop/search.ep?keyWords=%22compleating+cul+de+sac%22