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Saturday, June 15, 2019
PR: Exclusive Jim Lee Batman / Star Wars art / Disney cel art from ArtInsights
Friday, June 14, 2019
June 15: Meet Dog Man at Hooray for Books
Saturday, June 15, 2019
Hooray for Books
Mon-Sat 10am - 8pm
Sun 10am - 6pm
1555 King St.
Alexandria, VA 22314
Phone: (703) 548-4092
Email: info@hooray4books.com
1 p.m.
2 p.m.
3 p.m.
MEET CLIFFORD
1:30 p.m.
2:30 p.m.
3:30 p.m.
June 22: Meet the Authors: Liz & Lucy Lareau
Meet the Authors: Liz & Lucy Lareau
- Saturday, June 22, 2019
- 2:00 PM 3:00 PM
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Hooray for Books
Mon-Sat 10am - 8pm
Sun 10am - 6pm1555 King St.
Alexandria, VA 22314
Phone: (703) 548-4092
Email: info@hooray4books.com
June 28: Animezing!: AKIRA
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Washington's Jake Tapper on NY Times lack of cartoons
CNN's Jake Tapper: New York Times Decision to Scrap Cartoons 'One More Nail in Coffin of Struggling Art Form'
Tapper tells The Daily Beast that the Times should be a leader for editorial cartooning, while James Bennet, editorial page editor, says the decision is 'right for our readers.'
July 12-14: Blerdcon in Crystal City
Thursday, June 13, 2019
June 22: Rob Rogers at the Newseum
'Enemy of the People: A Cartoonist's Journey'
555 Pennsylvania Ave. N.W.
Washington DC 20001
Editorial cartoonist Rob Rogers talks about his new book, "Enemy of the People: A Cartoonist's Journey," which chronicles his firing from the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette after the paper's editorial director refused to publish several of his cartoons critical of President Trump.
Rogers had been editorial cartoonist for the newspaper for more than 25 years and was fired in June 2018 after he had 18 cartoons or cartoon ideas spiked earlier in the year by Post-Gazette management.
"Enemy of the People" also features highlights of Rogers' political cartoons over the last three years, his coverage of past presidents, a tutorial on creating editorial cartoons and two long-form comics. The book also includes brief essays contributed by notable cartoonists and journalists championing the First Amendment and lauding the craft of editorial cartooning.
A book signing will follow the program.
If you are a Newseum member and would like to RSVP for this program, please email membership@newseum.org. Become a Newseum member and receive free admission and priority seating at this program and others.
Priority seating is subject to availability.
Wednesday, June 12, 2019
Sept 4: Randall Munroe in DC
Randall Munroe: HOW TO
- Wednesday, September 4, 2019 at 7 PM – 8 PM
- Sidwell Friends: Meeting House3825 Wisconsin Avenue, Washington, District of Columbia 20016
- Tickets by Eventbrite
- Ticket Only$20.00
- Ticket & Book$35.00
Tom King on not using the old "Marvel Method"
Cavna on the NY Times cartoon harikari
The New York Times cuts all political cartoons, and cartoonists are not happy
Tuesday, June 11, 2019
The Hill on the NY Times dropping all political cartoons
New York Times to stop publishing political cartoons
June 17: Sarah Boxer booksigning in Denver
Tom King off Batman, but still planning changes to him
Despite Setback, Tom King Still Plans to Redefine Batman for a Generation
by Jude Terror June 6, 2019
Monday, June 10, 2019
Flugennock's Latest'n'Greatest: "A Snake in the Grass"
http://sinkers.org/stage/?p=2741
Liberty Cap writes on Twitter on 06.09.19:
"Home grow cannabis is the most important economic factor put upon any
Government regulating cannabis and the industry to keep em honest and
on their toes. Competition promotes excellence and reduces prices,
that the American way. Limited access to market is capitalism gone
wrong."
https://twitter.com/LibertyCap420/status/1137716881618378753
DCMJ.org weighs in on DC Mayor Bowser's "Safe Cannabis Act" regarding
locally-grown cannabis:
"...DCMJ wants expert growers to be able to sell their excess cannabis
at farmer's markets in the District of Columbia. By providing an
outlet for locally grown cannabis, the DC government can ensure more
dollars are circulated locally and collect sales tax. Moreover, many
growers do not have the capital to invest in a large-scale growing
facility, but can provide the marketplace with unique varieties of
cannabis. Some strains of cannabis are not profitable for large-scale
cultivation, but small home growers can fill the niche if they are
given the opportunity to sell their extra cannabis. There is a fine
line between legal sales and illegal sales and we believe it primarily
involves volume of sales. No one cares if a gardener in DC sells their
extra tomatoes to their next-door neighbor, and we believe the same
case should be made for cannabis. However, if an adult wants to sell
in an established marketplace, we believe they should obtain a
"micro-cultivators license" to ensure they follow the rules. With this
license, the grower would be permitted to transport more cannabis than
regular citizens would be permitted to possess outside of their
homes..."
The current initial draft of the Safe Cannabis Act contains
constraints on the sharing of cannabis and has no provisions for the
legal sale of home-grown cannabis; much of this is due to the
influence of large-scale operations who want to corner the market for
adult-use and medical cannabis.
Most of the gray-market "pop-ups" which became popular in the wake of
Initiative 71 – many of which were busted at some point – aren't
selling DC-grown bud, but product often smuggled in from California
and Oregon, with no way of telling how it was grown, what types of
fertilizers were used, whether or not chemical pesticides were used,
etc. Giving DC local home growers a "Fair Shot" would go a long way
toward eliminating this issue, and keep all that money in DC.
Keep in mind that passage of the Safe Cannabis Act depends on the
passage of the DC budget bill without the notorious Harris Rider,
which prevented DC from taxing and regulating the legal sale of
cannabis. The Rider was written out of the bill thanks to the efforts
of DC Congressional Rep. Eleanor Holmes Norton; the bill passed out of
the House Oversight Committee, but still needs to get through the
Senate and be signed by Mr. T.
Local home-grown cannabis is essential to countering the threat of big
money and "Big Weed". The Plant belongs to the People.
Sunday, June 09, 2019
Josh Kramer on The Nib
Friday, June 07, 2019
Meet a Local Cartoonist: A Chat with Sarah Boxer
What type of comic work or cartooning do you do?
I moved from New York to Washington eleven years ago with my husband and son, because my husband, Harry Cooper, got a job as the curator of Modern Art at the National Gallery. We now live in Cleveland Park, not far from the zoo, so I have lots of live models.
If you could, what in your career would you do-over or change?
I guess I'd be born a boy.
What work are you best-known for?
If anyone knows me for my comics, it's got to be for my first psycho-comic, In the Floyd Archives: A Psycho-Bestiary, based on Freud's case histories, which Pantheon published in 2001. (It's now being republished.) But it's likelier that people know me for my writing. I was at The New York Times for 16 years. There I was a photography critic, book review editor, and arts reporter. And since all my editors at the Times knew I especially loved comics, I got to write the obituaries for Saul Steinberg and Charles Schulz. I also got to interview Art Spiegelman when the second volume of Maus came out. And I got to sit in William Steig's orgone box.
I'm looking forward to diving into drawing my next Shakespearean tragic-comic Anchovius Caesar: The Decomposition of a Romaine Salad, in which Julius Caesar is an anchovy and all the action takes place underwater.
I write when I have drawer's block; and I draw when I have writer's block.
What do you think will be the future of your field?
Mother May I? page |
I think the future of comics is online. The experience of trying to get a nice clean copy of Mother May I? set for publication made me realize that I need a very good tablet with a pen, so I don't ever have to go through the copy process again. That's how I composed Hamlet: Prince of Pigs. I find using a tablet very liberating. It's easier to change little expressions on the faces of my characters. It's nice not to have a lap full of eraser dust. And in the end, it's much easier to get my comic to a publisher or printer!
I go every year to the Small Press Expo with my (now 15-year-old) son, Julius Boxer-Cooper, who's also a cartoonist, and this year I am sharing an exhibitor's table (or rather a half-table) with him. In school he hands out zines -- or, as he calls them, cackets (short for comics-packets) to his classmates. Here are his words of wisdom for would-be cartoonists: "If you're going to be a 'zine cartoonist, then you're going to have to get used to seeing your comics torn, crumpled, thrown on the ground, thrown in the recycling, or thrown in the trash with strawberry or raspberry Gogurt that's a few weeks old dumped over them." I admire his toughness! And his comics!
I despise our very orange very nasty President in the very very white White House.
I'd rather eat in New York.
Do you have a website or blog?