Digital Strips 180 – Things We Liked 2009

Another year has come and gone and that means that we have to do our duty as a self-important blog and podcast of giving our best of. Because seriously, if self-important blogs don’t record what was good and what blew of under appreciated pop culture, who will?

Like last year we give our favorite Zuda Entry, our favorite Horizon’s Pick, our Favorite Strips we reviewed and best all around comic. Hopefully our picks don’t match up with yours exactly and you’ll have a violent opinion that you just must share. I didn’t specifically ask for feed back on the show but that was because I’m a jerk. I’m better now and we’d love to hear what you think in the comments.

Here are our picks for people who don’t want to listen to the whole show:

Best Zuda:
Peabody and D’gorath (Jason)
Integration Control Element (Steve)

Best Horizon:
Lovecraft is Missing (Jason)
The Meek (Steve)

Best Reviewed Comic:
Legend of Bill (Jason)
Imagine This (Steve)

For best overall comic you’ll have to tune in. I’m a dick that way.

Also unfortunately this will have to do for our Zuda Watch for December. We give our picks and discuss the best this competition had to offer, a slide over the rest. Let us know if you think this is a new format. It sure was easier for us.

Show Notes:

Mark WolfChild
Sub Seulo
The kind you don’t take home to mother.
Octane Jungle
Bow and Arrow
Scott Kurtz
David Gallaher
Mathema
Digital Strips Adventures
Episode 164
I love tapes
Snowflakes
Pigtails and Potbellies
Dawn of Time
Dork Tower
Order of the Stick
XKCD
Wonderella-ella-ella
Penny Arcade
Finder’s Keepers

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Divas, Advice, WCC 2009, Chickenhare, and Mocktopus

It’s been a long holiday and I’m finally back for the holidays. I try not to let more than 4 days go by without giving you webcomic goodness but sometimes you can’t help but enjoy time with your sig other’s family. No worries, your minds can rest because we have more linkage to massage it. It helps that my alerts went nuts and I’m sitting on 30+ news articles.

Let’s start with an interview that’s days old. Lately there seems to be more and more sites covering webcomics, to the point where I could spend day after day trolling sites for you link to. More to the point, it’s a great way to get introduced to someone’s creation when you can hear their voice. One example is this interview from fandomania with the creators of Evil Diva. Kelly gets into some questions about how the strip was started and what goes into it’s routine in creating it. From the banter we get back and forth between them I would probably listen to a podcast, but luckily we odn’t have to deal with the competition and instead get a rather cute, unique, and creative strip.

If I had to write the obvious steps to take when creating a webcomic I think this would be it. I think I find these at least once a month and there’s always that one piece of advice that bugs me every time. They always tell you to write what you love, as if that is a magic formula to producing mass quantities of fantastic material. Every time I read this advice I get the same reaction: “What they’re really telling me is write what you love so you don’t feel bad when you don’t make it.” If you want some real advice I’ve got two things for you. 1) Write what you know, not what you love. 2) Don’t start off with your comic. The reasoning is simple. Just because you think you love something doesn’t mean you can be a brilliant commentator about it. It takes practice and experience to be good.

Missed another webcomic convention in Webcomic-Con 2009. I don’t know much about it but it looked like there is finally something on the west coast that wasn’t either Comic-Con or PAX. Yes I know there’s others like Emerald City but this one seems dedicated exclusively to webcomics. Don’t know what happened so if anyone has followed up it feel free to comment.

Another print comic goes wild and joins the flooding ranks of comics online. After publishing two volumes of Chickenhare with Dark Horse Comics, Chris Grine turns the focus of its third volume to the Internet. The first volume of Chickenhare was published through Dark Horse comics in September 2006 and was amazingly nominated for an Eisner award in 2007! It has also been published in Italian where it was called, Leprepollo. The second volume, though it was praised, like it’s predecessor proved to be difficult to market due to it’s odd characters and off-beat story-lines.

Found another interview with a different comic. This time we get some intimate goodness from Comics Alliance over Mocktopus. Talk about something I would never have thought to review. Here’s a comic that specializes in not having a point. It’s a little like watching Seinfeld but in comic form and written by someone who’s dying to pick a major in Design. At least this high school student should because despite an unorthodox approach he seems to havea formula that works. Max set out from the beginning to create neither a gag strip nor an epic story. Fomr day to day you can expect any number of styles in both the line work and the inking, the color and the shading. but not the writing. Although I haven’t dived in to the comic it certainly looks worth a read.

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Digital Strips 179 – Review: Finder’s Keepers

There is a genre of web comics that I seem to forget about and rediscover every couple of months. Fantasy web comics are everywhere on the Internet. Seriously the only thing I think you can find more sites dedicated to are cameras pointed at lonely singles. And yet some how, I keep forgetting that they’re even there. But then one falls into my lap and I find myself with tons of new reading material.

Among the masses though there are comics of all levels. The cream rises to the top though on this episode as we take a look at Finder’s Keepers by Garth Cameron Graham. We had a ton of fun reading and talking about this comic and hope you will enjoy the show.

If you don’t, you suck.

Show Notes:

The David Mitchell Video
Pajama Forest
Least I Could Do
SnowFlakes
Byron Pinkleton
Grumps
Wonderella
Penny Arcade
PVP “incident”
Yet Another Fantasy Gamer Comic
11/27 Imagine this
Digital Strips Adventures

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Can you do 3000? Only if you’re Evil, Inc.

Webcomics die hard Brad Guigar celebrated crossing the 3,000-strip mark with last Saturday’s (12/13) installment of “Evil Inc.” Guigar began one of the longest running careers in the biz doing a six-day-a-week comic, Greystone Inn, in February 2000, and with few exceptions, Guigar has been cranking out a daily comic ever since. The now immortalized Greystone ended in June, 2005, and his new daily comic, “Evil Inc,” began.

The list of comics Brad does is not even included in this list. With those extra comics, such as Guigar’s other comics works “Courting Disaster” (260) and “Phables” (97), could probably push him towards the 4000 mark, but the true amazement is that those 3000 have been mostly all in a row. He even has his record backed up by the long forgotten Daily Grind Iron Man Challenge.

Guigar is the co-author of “How To Make Webcomics” and the editor-in-chief of Webcomics.com.

Pertinent URLS:
• Evil Inc: http://www.evil-comic.com
• Greystone Inn: http://www.GreystoneInn.net
• Courting Disaster: http://www.courting-disaster.com
• Phables: http://www.phables.com
• Webcomics.com: http://www.webcomics.com

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Less time for Dawn

Bit of sad news to start your morning out with. Highly DS recommended strip “Dawn of Time” creator Michael Stearns announced today that he’ll be cutting back updates from MWF to once a week so that he can focus on his art career.

I guess we’ll have to sate our selves on the adventures of the lovable Dawn and her even more loveable triceratops companion Blue just once a week until the comic takes off and becomes the weekly syndicated Saturday morning cartoon that it deserves to be.

You can check out our review of the strip here.

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GeekToMe, Postcards, Design, UFO’s, and the End of the World

Somehow in a matter of days my Google alert, for webcomic news, went crazy. There were at least 15 but half of those were for the constant Digg updates on xkcd or the Weekly Webcomiq Wrapup from Joystiq. Both of which I stop bothering with because I just get tired of being bombarded. Now for something completely different.

It looks like webcomics has a fan at Chicago Now in GeekToMe. Don’t know about the name, as there’s something inherently annoying in calling webcomics Geek related. Anyways it appears he mentions small comics every Wednesday with little fanfare except that it’s mentioned on a site that gets hundreds of thousands of readers. Not bad.

The fourth annual Webcomic Holiday Postcard Fundraiser has begun where a whole bunch of webcomic artists have teamed up to create a set of classy holiday themed postcards! By purchasing any holiday themed postcard set, you’ll be donating to Child’s Play, a charity that collects toys and donations for sick children each holiday season! These high quality 4.25″x6″ postcards feature original art from Chris Malone, H. Caldwell Tanner, Steve Napierski, Tina Pratt, Brian Wilson, David Stanworth, Jamie Noguchi, Jen Brazas, Mohammad F. Haque, Scott Ramsoomair, Shawn Handyside, Vinson “Bleedman” Ngo, Yuko Ota.

Normally I don’t mention when a site does nothing but show a specific strip. I find that slightly silly and showing a complete lack of writing skill, but then every once in awhile the strip is worth reading. This time I’m linked to a new comic called Oatmeal.It took me 30 min to get past the ghastly artwork but the writing is so enjoyable I learned to read without using my eyes. This one in particular had me howling as it’s similiar to my past experiences dealing with clients.

Newsarama gives an interview with APE Entertainment’s Submissions Editor, Troy Dye, and the writer of a new APE webcomic, Elton Pruitt. Whilte talking about UFO Anthology: Encounter with the Unknown Newsarama discovers that APE has an existing small collection of webcomics, believes in alien life, every parent has a story to scare the children, everyone loves their readers doing their work for them, and that all it takes to be successful in any new project is to do your best.

The newest webcomic critic, El Santo, has a new editorial up on ComixTalk. Not my cup of tea but he does take a very long and in-depth look at the Zuda comic Azure. Apparently it’s an apocalyptic webcomic that doesn’t leave anything to chance. If you’re going to destroy the world why not throw everything you got it? Well El Santo goes further and talks about the artwork, setting, and writing with enough detail to wet my appetite but enough to convince me to read the comic. Although I could probably get by with a few fight scenes from the sneak peeks he shows us.

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Digital Strips 178 – Review Pajama Forest

Alrighty faithful listeners, things are back to normal here at Digital Strips Central. I’m back in the saddle ready to review some comics. After almost a month off, i was pretty pissed off and ready to vent my frustrations at the nearest comic with bug-eyed characters I could find. The comic that fit the bill was Pajama Forest by Evan Diaz.

This was a fun show all around. We start with the Google News alerts (which we’re still taking feedback on, so if you feel one way or the other about it, please inform us) then get right into the meat of the matter: Pajama Forest. We talk about all the usual topics. What we like, what we don’t. What made us laugh, what made us cry. We grow closer to each other. It’s truly Oscar worthy entertainment.

What do you guys think? Is the comic too random? Too short? Too funny? Let us know in the comments, that’s what they are there for.

Show Notes:
Penny Arcade
PATV
PVP
Achewood
American Elf
AV Club top comics
The Ontarian Blurb
Bobwhite
Nerdriod
Lackisdaisy
Tiny Kitten Teeth
Cross Hare
Love Sick Comic
My Cardboard Life
Insert-Joke-Here

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Buy a 2010 PvP/Skull Calendar ~AND~ Help Some Cambodian Children

skullCalendarRemember that webcomics community I was just praising? It’s opportunities like this that make that group such a good one to be associated with.

Via yet another tweet, Scott Kurtz has asked all bloggers to help spread the word about his latest calendar, featuring a Skull plushie traveling around the world, which will help to improve the lives of many Cambodian children.

Nothing more to say about it that hasn’t already been said: it’s a product you were probably going to buy anyways and it benefits a great cause. So click here, get your calendar, help out the children of Cambodia, and tell a friend.

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The Webcomic Overlook Evaluates The Biz ~OF~ Reviewing Webcomics

Via a tweet from The Superfogeys creator, Brock Heasley, I’ve stumbled across this introspective write-up from luchador blogger, El Santo, on the business of reviewing webcomics. The post is interesting in terms of what he will be writing about on his own blog in the future, but it’s the comments about giving time to new, unknown webcomics vs. covering the big guns that piqued my interest the most. On the goal of focusing on the unknowns, he writes:

This is actually a very noble aim. I mean, does the world need another person gushing about how much he loves Penny Arcade? Do we need yet another person saying why xkcd is the greatest webcomic of the century? Isn’t ragging on Ctrl+Alt+Delete just getting a wee bit tired? Wouldn’t you rather hear something new?

I applaud all bloggers who live by this code. I’ve encountered quite a few, in fact, have expressed the same sentiment […]

See? Someone applauds us. So we’re doing something right.

In terms of what we here at Digital Strips cover, the unknown approach seems to work the best for us. Sure, we can throw the success stories a bone here and there, but my personal goal for DS is to help those comics that are incredibly talented but not necessarily connected to the greater webcomic community find their way to that road that will lead to the community that eventually builds towards a greater following and thus, greater success.

While I can’t disagree with El Santo’s reasons for reviewing bigger, more recognized webcomics, we decided a while back to make this our mission statement and luckily, we’ve been able to keep the podcast alive, which is our best shot at connecting with readers/listeners about a new property they need to notice on their radar.

Thanks to El Santo for getting this discussion started, and please chime in with your thoughts on the topic.

The Webcomic Overlook: Why Captain Nihilist reviews the “big” webcomics (El Santo, 2009)

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Scott Kurtz To Team ~WITH~ Comics Legend, Neal Adams, For Christmas Storyline

From our friends at Fleen (hey, this is the time of sharing and caring), who discovered the news from Bleeding Cool (see?), it seems that Scott Kurtz, who has been jazzing up PvP for months now with a more digital, comic book-y feel, will be pairing with comics legend Neal Adams.

I trust there is some crossover between our webcomics lovers and those of the print variety, so Adams’ name should be one that is instantly recognizable. Known for his grittier, more realistic takes on various heroes for both Marvel and DC Comics, Adams’ contribution to the PvP Xmas arc will likely be minimal, though more in terms of content than the impact he will make on both Kurtz and the comic loving fans that frequent the PvP site.

Next thing you know, Adams has connections with the Academy of Art and Sciences and BAM! Kurtz is hosting the Oscars come 2011. Mark my words, people…

Fleen: This No-Internet Thing Is Getting Old (Gary Tyrrell, 2009)
Bleeding Cool: Scott Kurtz and Neal Adams Team Up (Rich Johnston, 2009)

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