Digital Strips 169 – Zuda Watch Aug 2009

There seems to be strange new pattern emerging from Zuda Watch these days. Yours Truly, once the paragon of optimism and joy is finding more and more thinks to gripe about than every before. Meanwhile the Midnight Cartooner, a man once so bitter he was a few gray hairs from sitting on a bench and yelling at squirrels and immigrants, is beginning to sound a bit like a fan girl.

These episode we dig into another feast of Zuday goodness and lay it all bare before you. We do hope you enjoy it.

A while back some one told me it would be better it I had links to each entry in these notes so I’m going to give it a try. Also besides the name of each comic is the approximate time that we started reviewing it. Never say we Digital Stripists never respond to advice, it just takes us a half a year or so sometimes.

A Stinking Corpse 4:45
Absolute Magnitude 9:05
Antique Books 13:00
Artic 17:35
Bow and Arrow Detective Agency 23:00
Cards Kill 28:00
If you can see the hills 30:45
Octane Jungle 33:30
Psyicon 38:33
Rogue Royal 42:35

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Digital Strips 168 – Review: The System

poojokeYou know those people who say that “less is more” and try to pass it off a deep wisdom, when really their just dicking you out of half of your fries? You should show them The System by Rosscott, because it’s an example of when less really is more, more funny, that is.

Jason and I had a heck of a time on this show, we were really in our element. You can take a listen and let us know if that’s a good thing or not.

Sites mentioned in this episode:
XKCD
Real Life Comic
CAD
Imagine This
Girls with Slingshots
PVP

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Digital Strips 167 – Zuda Watch July 2009

Guess what we did. I’ll give you a hint. It rhymes with “Mooda Watch”.

That’s right, it’s time for another Zuda Watch episode. Jason and I take a look at all of the competitors over at Zuda this month.

So head on over to Zuda and follow along with us as we give our opinions of each comic and when your opinion doesn’t match ours, head on back and let us know. That’s what the comments are for.

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Digital Strips 166 – Horizons Watch: Tails and Cucuc

Ah and now here we are at every podcaster’s least favorite place. I have to write something intriguing to hook you guys into listening to our latest show, but really all I want to say is, “Hey guys, look. We talked for 20 minutes and now there’s a show.”

I’m not going to do you guys like that. Though. I’m going to say clever things like “This episode is cooler than the other side of a popsicle wearing sunglasses.”

Wow, that went poorly. Here are the comics we looked at this time.

Tails by Ethan Young
Cucuc by Cathbad and Mirlikovir

Hey look, actual show notes. This episode we mention the following:
Pandora
Hulu
Good Ship Chronicles
Horribleville
Hereville

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Digital Strips 165 – Review: Chronillogical

Have you ever wished you could go back in time so you could tell yourself not to put your keys down, thereby preventing the endless search that you are now enduring? I think thoughts like this are what led to comics like Chronillogical.

Chronillogical, by Jon Chouinard and Greg Poulos is the target of our critical laser this time around. It’s a silly strip with silly characters so we think we fit in just fine.

Let us know what you think of the strip and the show in the comments below.

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Digital Strips 164 – Horizons Watch: I Love Tapes and The Meek

This show is not for the faint of heart, we say all kinds of words and phrases that my mother would not approve of. Of course my mother got on my case when I said “fart-knocker” so ample use of terms like “boobies” and “dick” along with phrases like “the c-word” (just the phrase the c-word, we’d never say the c-word) and “gay Barack Obama” would make her wonder where she went wrong.

Today we look at two glorious strips that are brand spanking new on the scene and that you should go out of your way to make feel welcome. They are:

I Love Tapes by Frank Gibson and Ned C Hugar
The Meek by Der-shing Helmer

Let us know what you think of these comics and our show in the comments below.

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Digital Strips 163 – Review: Legend of Bill

It’s time for another review, this time we harken back to a simpler time when all a man needed to score a massive pile of golden coins and a bar full of wenches was a good loin clothe, a sturdy battle-ax and a loyal blue dragon companion. This is the world of The Legend of Bill, a comical romp by veteran creator David Reddick.

We spend a lot time talking about the comic, and also delved into deeper topic of some of the differences between Web comics and those you’ll find in your local newspaper. You should listen, or we’ll sic our barbarian on you.

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Review ~OF~ The Superfogeys by Brock Heasley

If there’s one thing this webcomic denizen loves more than anything else in his stories, it’s superheroes. Fantastic and iconic, these figures of American lore make us want to be more than we are, they inspire us to be better, and they live their lives to make our world a safer place.

How shocked was I, then, to find someone has decided to depict these dooers-of-good well past their prime. Brock Heasley is (to my knowledge) the first creator to base an entire comic series out of a retirement home (here appropriately named Valhalla) for superheroes. With his strip, The Superfogeys, we are offered a glimpse into the life of those fantastic adventurers once their spirits and/or flesh have been made weak. What this entails is great fun, good laughs, and a cast of characters that are at once ridiculous and pitiable, extraordinary and plain, and full of life in their own particular ways.

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Continue reading

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Digital Strips 162 – Zuda Watch May 2009

Digital Strips 162

May was an interesting month for Zuda, but an even more interesting month for Zuda Watch. We don’t have Brigid around to keep us in line so right out of line we go as we battle for our favorites, jeer those we hate and say bad things about each other moms.

Good times, good times.

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Review ~OF~ Unshelved Vol. 6: Frequently Asked Questions

This begins my look at various comics around the web that I discovered during this year’s NEWW (also known as Webcomics Weekend for those who may have already forgotten). First up is Unshelved, the hugely popular library humor comic from writer Gene Ambaum and artist Bill Barnes. Now given my experiences with both creators at the event, I figured their sixth volume, titled, Frequently Asked Questions, would beunshelvedvol6 full of pithy dialogue and smart moments that invoked deep thought and intriguing questions.

What I found after reading the nearly 90 pages of strips (collected from Feb. 07 to Feb. 08), followed by several editions of the Unshelved Book Club, a Sunday-running addition where the cast takes a look at the hottest books in a review/synopsis format), was an exact opposite of that expectation. The humor is dry and very accessible, featuring common punchlines and simple storylines that don’t bother with weaving in and out of continuity in lieu of uncomplicated setups and characters that forgo development and depth for simplicity and accessability.

First, I found this difference to be off-putting. After meeting both men, especially the ukelele-strumming, biting-comment-throwing Mr. Barnes, I was not ready for a strip that was rudimentarily drawn and simplistically written. As I picked up the book, however, he informed me that all volumes should be instantly accessible due to simple storylines and shallow, if not fun, characters. The more I thought about my underwhelmed reaction, the more the premise started to really shine through for me.

Unshelved is a librarian’s strip made for librarians to enjoy and share. Bill and Gene regularly attend library conventions (rousing shin-digs that THOSE must be) and do incredible business with that crowd. You have to figure that they, being greater in number than the typical webcomics fans, are the target audience for the strip and probably don’t care as much about plot, character development, or continuity. This is not to dumb down the readers of Unshelved, it just shows that the creators know their audience and plan accordingly.

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Buddy the Book Beaver: easily one of the creepiest webcomics characters EVER

With all that said, Unshelved follows a regular cast as they bumble their way through running a library. There’s main lead, Dewey, who usually fuels the humorous situations with unnecessary comments; branch manager Mel, who does her best to keep things level-headed but occasionally slips into the innanity around the workplace;  Tamara, who exists somewhere in-betweeen productivity and Dewey’s world of do-as-little-as-possible; Colleen, who always seems to have a cause or policy to support/invoke; and Buddy the Book Beaver, a reading-is-fun mascot who exists merely to creep everyone out. Everyone plays their parts well and pop in simply to spout lines based on their occupation/purpose and move on. It’s simple, it’s easy, and it’s quick, perfectly suited for the audience and the  gag-a-day format the comic follows.

Ultimately, I see that I went into Unshelved with the wrong mindset. I expected to find something deep and thought-provoking and instead found a casual strip made by two guys are deep and thought-provoking and thus know how to work their skills to produce the most entertaining and effective product for their audience. These days, it really all seems to boil down to finding your audience and efficiently catering to them. If that’s a criteria for success, then both Barnes and Ambaum have it down to an art form.

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The last, and most decisive, strip of the Unshelved vs. Sheldon steel cage match

If you’re looking for either a quality gag-a-day to add to your RSS feeds or a good strip collection to add to your library, Unshelved does a great job of making a mundane occupation entertaining and Vol. 6 includes a recap of the contextual war the Unshelved guys waged with Dave Kellett’s Sheldon , The Great Plastic Coffee Cup Lid Comic Strip Challenge (narrated by head Fleener, Gary Tyrrell) as well as the engaging, informative, and humorous Book Club shorts that might just introduce you to a writer or genre you haven’t given a chance yet. And on top of everything else, if these guys can get you to try a book you otherwise would have passed up, I’d say they’re doing both webcomics and librarians proud.

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