Cartoon upgrade

12-27-14 returns013 - color

Above is the original version of this two-year old cartoon. Below is an upgraded copy, incorporating some of the things I’ve slowly learned in the past 24 months. It’s fun to do this when I have a little time…

12-28-16-return

Goals

6-28-16 important

It’s probably one of the reasons. Sorry for the lengthy absence. I wish I could say I’ve been busy drawing cartoons for The New Yorker, but I haven’t. Just been in one of those unmotivated, Sunday-afternoon-nap fugues, I guess.

June 9, 2016 & The New Yorker

6-9-16 timberlake

One would think that Mr. Timberlake could command more than six million. His agent must take–what–a quarter pound of that?

On another note…I’ve been doubling down on my New Yorker cartoon submissions. Since that is my cartooning goal I’m putting more time into thinking up and creating drawings I think will have a chance of acceptance. That means less whiteouts.

Of course when their rejections catch up with the pace of my submissions (about a four month lag time) you’ll see a lot more of those cartoons here. 😉

Algorithms

6-3-16 algorithms

I use the apple news app on my iPhone and iPad. When setting it up I just picked a few sources that were fairly closely related. After a few weeks I realized that I was only reading one side of the story(ies) and how limiting that was. I added in more diverse voices and eliminated a few of the original ones. Much better, though sometimes off-putting to my sensibilities.

The Interwebs are smart. They quickly learn what (and who) we like and dislike, what pages we visit, what ads we click so that the algorithms can keep a steady diet of pleasing-to-us content coming our way. That way, we’ll keep consuming their sites and adding to the visits that enable them to charge advertisers more money. There is no incentive for them to challenge our patterns with content that might drive us away. They want to make us “happy.”

It’s a subtle form of mind control. It keeps us grinning stupidly at our screens and hardens our hearts to perspectives that are outside the ruts we’ve become so used to traveling.

And it contributes to the polarized, Us vs. Them world in which we live. No news flash there.

So try reading or watching something different. You don’t have to start with Rachel Maddow or Rush Limbaugh…just try to get into the center a little bit more. It will ultimately help us all.

 

 

 

November 5, 2015

11-5-15 - stickers - color

This is the third cartoon in a series whose length is still-to-be-determined. I know there’s a lot of Calvin & Hobbes influence here…maybe I’m drawn (pun not intended, for once) to this style and humor because I miss Watterson’s work so much. Imitation is the highest form of flattery…