Finally here!
Greetings! Enjoying the relatively consistent update schedule so far? Glad to hear it.
By the way, unfortunately today’s comic will be significantly delayed. I let the drawing and scanning get down close enough to the wire that my computer pooping out on me would be a major issue (which is exactly what happened). If the needed repair is as simple as I think, I’ll have the strip posted sometime this evening.
This would be a great time to look into the RSS feed for the strip. It’s a good way to make sure you don’t miss an update if something interrupts your regular reading schedule. Hopefully in the future it won’t be something like this.
But seriously; I really appreciate your reading the strip regularly; and I’ll get the comic up ASAP. Sanford’s grumpy in it, which makes it seem strangely appropriate.
It was the best of Toy Story movies, it was the worst of Toy Story movies. Oh, by the way, spoiler alert?
It was the best of Toy Story movies, because it did everything right the second one did right. It took the things you liked about the first two Toy Story movies and upped the emotional ante. When it was exciting, it was super exciting. When they had to figure a problem out, they had to come out with a detailed, intricate plan. When the characters were in trouble, they weren’t just going to get lost, they were going to meet their complete and total demise. When you cried (or almost cried), you didn’t look self-consciously around the theater and wonder if it was just that the song sounded sadder than it really was. You knew that everyone there who was a human being was right there with you.
OK, I’m going to get in a lot of trouble for pointing out that there might be a way that this was the worst movie of the three, since by and large it’s the best one (provided you’ve seen the other two). But the reason the first movie worked is that it takes a fun, fairly original concept and explores it pretty completely: Toys have lives of their own, lived in context of relationships with each other and their owners. By this third movie, they’ve explored it so fully, that a couple of elements seem to lack the originality that other Toy Story elements have. I think there were only two disappointments in the movie:
Lotso: Rejected by his owner, he helps himself sleep at night by rejecting the idea that being owned isn’t what really matters; and he uses manipulation and psychological games to gain position and prestige to replace the love he once knew. Oh, wait, I’m sorry… I was thinking of Stinky Pete, the prospector from Toy Story 2. I argue that if Pete had access to two rooms full of naive toys, he would be little different from this supposedly new and original villain. You might argue that Lotso’s history differs him from Pete, who never had been owned. Perhaps, but put Jessie’s history with Pete’s worldview, make him more grandfatherly and sinister, and you’ve got Lotso. Lotso really put the toys in some very exciting jeopardy, but I never found him to be very compelling in and of himself.
Demo Mode/Spanish Buzz: This is the one element of the story that (a) I hoped they wouldn’t do, (b) they did, and (c) I still wished they hadn’t at the end of the movie. I had a long discussion with some of my friends about this, and although we disagree, I maintain that you can make Buzz both exciting and funny without having to constantly find some way to make him delusional like he was in the first movie. Plus, I feel that the plot points involved were a bit of a stretch. Movie number three is pretty late in the game for nobody to have ever known about his demo mode, and if Buzz was manufactured in the mid-90s, how realistic is it that he’d even have one?
But don’t let my focusing on those two elements make you think that I didn’t enjoy the living daylights out of this movie. Toy Story continues to be the quintessential Pixar, and this is probably the best of all possible endings to what is surely some of the best of Pixar.
Let me wrap up by focusing on an element that I think helped the movie immeasurably: New Andy. I know that the redesign of the characters was partially out of necessity, but Pixar seems to be saying, “OK, everybody. It seems that we’ve learned how to make human characters since Toy Story 2, so let’s pretend you never saw what is now in comparison ‘1970s Animatronic Robot Andy’. Here’s New Andy. Let’s shake hands on the idea that this is the Andy you’ve known all along. Um… also, his mom is Mrs. Incredible now. Just for fun.”
Every year to observe Independence Day, I listen to both volumes of Stan Freberg’s United States of America albums. If you can find them, I heartily recommend them.
Hey everybody, guess what? Tuesday afternoon I got a brand-new nephew named Levi! Cool beans, eh?
I’m trying to get some things organized and squared away to let me do a bit more in the way of blogging here, but this week is a bit busy, so i’ll have some more content going down next week. Have a good weekend!
He, everybody! Time for a blog post of various topics! (Emboldened for your convenience!)
The other day at my “day-job” work, one of my customers was the third cousin of Wayne Allwine, the voice of Mickey Mouse from 1977 until his death just over a year ago, the longest time on that job spent by any of Mickey’s voices. That’s right; I’m the kind of person who would ask about that kind of thing.
A significant majority of the comments I’m getting on the blog seem to be spam. If you have a legitimate comment, here are some things you can do to make sure I don’t delete it:
- Post it in English. Nothing at all against any other language, but English is the native language of the strip, and I’m going to assume anybody who can read it can probably manage to compose a blog post that way.
- If you have a website to which your username will link, make sure it has some content besides YouTube-style video clips that does not immediately scream “spam” to viewers.
- Be specific. Although I like “great post as usual,” but I’ll probably still delete it on the above two bases. ”Today’s comic was particularly funny” will tell me that you actually know you’re posting on a site featuring a comic strip. If responding to blog post info, it’s easy enough to refer back to a particular topic.
…But do keep those legitimate comments coming!
I’m trying to find some blog material not directly related to drawing comics, but the comic is new enough that you (the audience) and I (the hack) don’t know each other that well yet.
As I’m trying to be a bit more regular in my blog posts, I’m trying to put the kind of content into it that I enjoy reading in other cartoonists’ blogs, websites, etc. I’m always fascinated to know of particularly strong influences and creative heroes that different cartoonists have. On the other hand, with only a handful of strips (of dubious artistic consistency) up, a pretty small readership and little community interaction, it seems like a vanity move to put my own out there.
But then I realized that, in this particular instance, it’s also something that is a pretty big key in getting to know me, period, so I’m going to go ahead and throw it out there. I love the Muppets. Their material on Sesame Street and The Muppet Show is probably the biggest influence on any creative thing I do. The particular way of driving material with characters, mixed with just enough random comedy, neither of which was afraid to be silly, is the kind of thing I’ve aspired to all my life.
I’m not afraid to admit an absurd level of nerdiness. Parts of the Onion article I Appreciate The Muppets on a Much Deeper Level Than You are an eerily accurate view into what goes on in my head (except I give Steve Whitmire’s Ernie about a B average, and I think The Muppet Christmas Carol is pretty great).
So the pick of this week is: watch a Muppet movie. If you’re 20 or over, I would definitely recommend starting with The Muppet Movie. I think it can be convincingly argued as the best of all possible Muppet movies. But if you’re young enough that a pretty strong late-’70s feel to a movie makes it dated enough to be distracting, you could maybe start with The Muppets Take Manhattan (to an ’80s child like myself, it strikes a very familiar chord).
Actually, let me give you some more instant gratification. Check out the Sesame Street video player for either a great nostalgia trip or to discover that there was really some pretty great comedy on that show. And for us real geeks, you can check out the Muppet Wiki for all your information needs and Tough Pigs for your news and online-community needs.
P.S. – I would qualify my obsession with a timeframe up to around 1993 or 4. After Jim Henson’s death, things obviously weren’t the same, and sometime in the mid-90s is where I’d say that started not only affecting tone but quality. But that’s another conversation for another time. I’m sure this won’t be the last you hear about this from me.
Hey everybody. I hope you enjoyed the first week of the strip! There’s plenty more on the way, and I’m really excited about that.
The plan, as I’m sure you know, is to maintain an update schedule of Mondays and Thursdays. This makes me feel in some ways like I’m one-third of a cartoonist, but other aspects of my life (“day job” work, family, etc.) are too time-consuming and unpredictable for me to do more at the moment. However, if I’m able to comfortably keep a good enough lead time for long enough, I’m considering upping the ante to three times a week or beyond, or experiment with color. But that’s a way off yet.
Similarly, I don’t really have the time to keep up with a forum, but I definitely check the comments regularly, and I’d like to try and set up an e-mail address for the strip; probably a gmail account or something. I love both the feedback and the interaction, so certainly don’t be shy on the comments, and I’ll make an effort to keep up my end of that dialog.
One way of keeping both content and dialog going is the blog. In addition to any strip-related news, my plan is to do a blog post on Saturdays. I thought it would be neat if each week I made a recommendation of some kind – talked about something I found useful or entertaining and think might be worth checking out. I thought this was a good way to keep the blog personal (subjective opinions) without being boring stories about my life in general. I’ll also be able to cover a wide range of subjects from “shop talk” (favorite drawing tools or writing practices) to entertainment (movies, books, music) to random usefulness of other kinds. It’ll be an edification grab-bag! I’ll try a couple and you let me know what you think. Deal?
So, to start out with an easy one, this week’s recommendation is the RSS feed. Many of my favorite webcomics (and, of course, blogs) update sporadically or infrequently, and simply adding them to (in my case) Google Reader makes it super easy for me to keep current without having to remember to visit the site.
I mean, come on: who’s going to make a routine out of two non-consecutive weekdays? Seriously?








