Shared posts

13 Jul 03:28

howard-bann1ster: thisblogisfortherats:failure-artist: agoodcar...



howard-bann1ster:

thisblogisfortherats:

failure-artist:

agoodcartoon:

voting en masse might result in better representation for americans who are so far below the poverty line that their meager income isn’t taxable. a good cartoon.

Talking trash about 47% of America, a group that included senior citizens, sure worked out for Romney.


i dont think anything’s going to improve until 1) being poor is no longer understood as a moral failure but just shit that happens and needs to be addressed; and 2) people stop imagining they’re all part of some ill-defined “middle class” and that it’s other poor people who want to take their money, and just say “fuck bootstraps and pandering, we need help, give us someone to vote for who doesn’t such rich dick”

Also, for fuck’s sake, that 47%? Let’s break that down.

10% - the elderly. Folks on social security. Think about that.

28.3% are the working poor, paying payroll taxes but not federal taxes.

6.9% - the non-elderly, including students living with their parents, the ultra-rich, all serving members of the armed forces (yeah, soldiers are exempt, did we mention that?) and anybody who’s poor and non-working.

(source-tax policy center)

Most of those folks would be HAPPY to be making enough money to pay federal income taxes. Hell, raise the minimum wage and two-thirds of them probably would! But even that wouldn’t be sufficient. There will always exist people who are elderly and retired, people who are in the armed forces, people are self-employed and report losses for the year, college students. This list is not just ‘the poors,’ this list is the size it is for structural reasons.



very good breakdown. the other side of the coin: how many corporations pay no taxes, and what would those lost taxes be compared to the 47% of individuals?
08 Jul 00:46

Photo



04 Jul 17:31

opening gitmo was a bad idea to begin with, and now the...



opening gitmo was a bad idea to begin with, and now the terrorism we created with destroy us for our hubris. a good cartoon.

02 Jun 16:12

STORYBOARDS!

by Mark Ackland
Hello!

Thought I would post some storyboard work I've done over the past few years including Mickey Mouse and Wander over Yonder. In particular was a rough board sequence from Book of Life that was deleted from the film. It's a bar fight between Chakal and Joaquin. Jorge wanted it set it in this tiny bar so that it would be tight, messy and ugly.
Thanks Jorge! It was so much fun to board. Too bad it never made it into the final cut.


Book of Life deleted Bar fight storyboard sequence by ackland_mark

Mickey Mouse "Seeing Red" Storyboard by ackland_mark

Mickey Mouse "Captain Donald" Storyboard by ackland_mark

Wander over Yonder "The Void" Storyboard by ackland_mark

All images copyright Ackimation Inc.
15 May 17:16

radfordsechrist: as-warm-as-choco: Some animated running...



















radfordsechrist:

as-warm-as-choco:

Some animated running by Yoh Yoshinari (吉成曜)

Great tutorial by the director of Little Witch Academia, and key animator in: Gurren Lagann, FLCL, KILL la KILL, Evangelion, Panty & Stocking (X)

Amazing!!!

12 May 18:28

Tuesday Tips - Stay Inspired, no matter what inspires you.More...



Tuesday Tips - Stay Inspired, no matter what inspires you.
More of a general tip this week. Any reason to draw, paint, or create is a good one. For some artists, myself included, waiting for inspiration can mean “not creating art”. I’m always at my best when I just let any idea move freely, without judgement. If I wait too long to start on something, it just won’t happen. The simple act of putting something down on paper, no matter what, always triggers the good part of your brain that doesn’t over-analyzes and judges your tastes. I sometimes feel conflicted about sharing certain things I enjoy that are not “high-art” or acclaimed movies. What I’m trying to say is, don’t be shy about what you like drawing or creating. Just do it. People will be attracted to your passion for it because it will show through your work. In this instance, I’ve been patiently awaiting the release of the video game “Witcher 3″. Mind you, I’ve never played the first 2, but I feel compelled to get this one. So, feeling inspired, I just started to sketch some stuff based on the trailer and gameplay videos that were released. So, whatever rocks your boat, use it to push yourself forward artistically. No matter what happens, you’ll be having fun doing it, and that fun will shine through and connect with others. Who else will be playing this game when it comes out? I am.
-n

12 May 15:38

Jen and I went to Wi Spa last week! Here’s a diary of...





















Jen and I went to Wi Spa last week! Here’s a diary of images about the experience, presented without commentary, that I whipped up right after. ✨

09 May 01:46

Photo



01 May 18:22

the long tradition of protests and riots – an unignorable...



the long tradition of protests and riots – an unignorable expression of anger from the voiceless and a fuck-you to “respectability politics” – has been fundamental to social change in this country since its founding, back when white people were praised for getting rowdy and destroying some property in a harbor. a good cartoon.

30 Apr 23:16

ronniesnark: mediamattersforamerica: You need to watch this...

















ronniesnark:

mediamattersforamerica:

You need to watch this full video.

(Video originally by Benjamin Hancock)

Watch this one too. It captures the full confrontation. Well, until dude had them turn the camera off.

30 Apr 15:52

Sketch dump











Sketch dump

29 Apr 16:01

Who created Caitlin Snow on #TheFlash? According to @DCComics, nobody

gerryconway:

Who created Caitlin Snow, the alter ego of Firestorm super-villain Killer Frost, who appears regularly on The Flash?

According to DC Entertainment, nobody.

That’s right. Caitlin Snow, the brilliant scientist working for Harrison Wells, fiancée of Ronnie Raymond and friend of Barry Allen, aka The Flash, sprang fully formed into existence without a creator or creators.

But that’s okay, because, by the logic employed by DC Entertainment, nobody created Barry Allen either.

Let me explain. See if you can follow me here.

As I’ve described elsewhere (http://comicsequity.blogspot.com), many years ago DC Comics established the first program to provide comic book creators with a share in the revenues generated by their creations in other media. This concept became known as “creator equity participation” and it was a small but significant step toward compensating creators for their work beyond a simple page rate. For me, personally, it’s been moderately lucrative (thank you, Bruce Timm, for putting Killer Croc in the animated Batman) but in recent years it’s also become an increasingly frustrating and, lately, infuriating process.

The reason, I believe, is the shift of corporate culture at DC Comics that occurred around the time Paul Levitz left his position as publisher.

As a comic book creator himself, Paul displayed a protective empathy for creators. Once the creator equity concept became policy, Paul applied it liberally and proactively– often notifying writers and artists their creations were due to receive equity participation when creators would otherwise have no idea. For thirty plus years, under Paul, creators were valued and supported as equity partners. (We can argue about the level of support, whether the percentage creators received was commensurate with their contributions, but we can’t deny that the support was there, and it was consistent.)

All of that changed when Paul left, and DC Comics became, officially, DC Entertainment, a fully subsumed cog in the Warners Entertainment wheel.

I first learned how this change would effect DC’s approach to creators equity when I received a letter from DC Entertainment’s new president, Diane Nelson, informing me I would no longer receive equity payments for Power Girl because she was now considered a “derivative” character. To soften the blow and show “appreciation” for my “contribution” she enclosed a check for $1000.

Thank you, Diane.

The next thing I learned about DC Entertainment’s new approach to their comic creators equity program was just as distressing, given how many characters I created for DC over the decade-plus I wrote for the company: if I wanted to receive an equity participation contract for a character I created, I had to request one, in writing, for each character, before that character appeared in another media, because DC would refuse to make equity payments retroactively.

By a rough guesstimate, I probably created over five hundred characters for DC between 1969 and 1985. Most of them were minor one-shot creations, and some of them, like Felicity Smoak (now a regular on Arrow) were minor supporting characters who’ve taken on a new life in other media. Unless I’m willing to commit a large chunk of my life to tracking down each character and filing a separate equity request in anticipation that somehow, some day, one of these characters might end up on a TV show, I risk being cut off from any share in the fruits DC enjoys from the product of my labor. A share which DC acknowledges I’m due– but which DC refuses to assist me in receiving.

Thank you, DC.

But now we come to the catch-22 of DC’s new approach to creator equity agreements. Assuming I perform my due diligence (which should really be DC’s due diligence) and dig up references to characters I’ve created that might soon be appearing in other media (maybe as a chess piece, or a Heroclix figure, or a recurring character on The Flash), and assuming I file the necessary request form in a timely fashion– DC can still decide, unilaterally, that my creation is “derivative” and they don’t owe me a dime.

What, exactly, is DC’s definition of a “derivative” character?

It’s a character that DC decides was “derived” from some other previously existing character.

For example, Power Girl– “derived” from Superman, because, like Supergirl, she’s a relative of Superman. Which means I can’t claim to be her co-creator because Superman is a pre-existing character. Fair enough, I suppose. The logic here is that Superman is the original creation, so Power Girl is derived from that original creation, so in effect, Power Girl is an extension of Superman, which means, by this tortured logic, that Power Girl was more or less created by Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster.

Uh, no.

This was the tortured logic National Periodical Publications tried to use back in the 1940s when Siegel and Shuster sued National for the rights to Superboy. National (the company that preceded DC) argued that Superman was the original creation, which Siegel and Shuster sold to National, and that Superboy was just a “derivative” creation. A court-appointed legal referee found that Superboy was in fact a unique creation and that National was guilty of copyright infringement. Sadly for Siegel and Shuster (and for creators everywhere), legal expenses forced the creators to sell National the rights to Superboy in a consent decree that obscured this fundamental finding. But the finding is pretty clear:

Characters “derived” from other characters are legally unique, and DC’s claim that “derivation” deprives creators of any equity participation rights in those characters is nothing more than an immoral, unethical, deceitful and despicable money grab.

Yet, it gets worse.

Let’s say DC agrees you created a character, like, for example, Killer Frost. In your original creation, Killer Frost had a secret identity named Crystal Frost. Later, a “new” Killer Frost is created for the New 52, and this new Killer Frost has a secret identity named Caitlin Snow.

You’ll be pleased to hear (I hope) that DC agrees I and Al Milgrom are the co-creators of all manifestations of “Killer Frost.” We are also considered the co-creators of Crystal Frost. And, of course, by the twisted logic that credits Power Girl as a derivation of Superman, Al and I must also be the creators of Killer Frost’s New 52 secret identity, Caitlin Snow.

Right?

No. We’re not. And DC insists we are not. And I agree with DC.

Caitlin Snow was created by Sterling Gates and Derlis Santacruz.

Except, according to DC Entertainment, she wasn’t. Because she was “derived” from the original creation of Killer Frost.

Which means Al Milgrom and I created her.

Except, according to DC Entertainment, we didn’t.

Nobody created her.

Or, rather, nobody gets credit and creator equity participation for creating her.

And that, my friends, is truly obnoxious and despicable.

DC Entertainment has created a marvelous catch-22 that allows them to cheat creators by using both sides of an argument to serve DC’s interests.

According to DC, Sterling Gates and Derlis Santacruz didn’t create Caitlin Snow. Don Newton and I didn’t create Jason Todd. Ric Estrada and I didn’t create Power Girl. Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster didn’t create Superboy. Bob Kanigher and Carmine Infantino didn’t create Barry Allen.

These characters just appeared out of nowhere.

But the money for their exploitation goes directly into DC’s bank account.

As a cartoonist, I find this stuff depressing as hell. :C

29 Apr 15:54

A little info (for those who are interested) on some of the new...















A little info (for those who are interested) on some of the new things I tried in Fazbear & Friends.

Watch FAZBEAR & FRIENDS now on youtube!

13 Apr 16:27

h2ndsomebear: I love this frame because it’s literally composed...

Chris P.

so weird when great compositions aren't planned to the degree they're analyzed



h2ndsomebear:

I love this frame because it’s literally composed as a renaissance painting and I thought i’d share

Dang!! That didn’t even cross my mind when I drew that panel hahaha. Thanks for pointing it out!

13 Apr 16:18

nearlyzero: Pretty much wheres the lie



nearlyzero:

Pretty much


wheres the lie
04 Mar 16:25

For any followers of mine that might think I’m one of...













For any followers of mine that might think I’m one of those “cool Internet people:”

These pictures are all accurate representations of me in high school. Shit, the fourth one even looks like me. I still have my collection of mostly useless katanas, and the deeply set insecurities and emotional/interpersonal scars that cause and perpetuate this lonely, sexless life. You can groom and dress yourself, workout, throw out your old weapons, hat collection, Shonen Jump and Kingdom Hearts games; You can cut off your ponytail and purge your computer of all the weird fetishes you’ve acquired as a substitute for the thrills of real intimacy. You can seek out and absorb all the feminist doctrine you can find to convince yourself that your plasticity of opinion makes you a better person now, but let me be the first to tell you that I’m not sure I or anyone else can ever fully escape it.

The neckbeard grows not from under your uninspiring jawline, but from your very SOUL.

03 Mar 16:40

davidrazi:roachpatrol: vintar: i’ve found my new favourite...













davidrazi:

roachpatrol:

vintar:

i’ve found my new favourite author

SPACE RAPTOR BUTT INVASION

THESE ARE REAL
THIS EXISTS
WHY AREN’T I PUBLISHING BOOKS
KIDS YOU CAN BE ANYTHING
CHUCK TINGLE YOU MAGNIFICENT BASTARD

Yeah my female friends keep talking about these books and my male roommate keeps talking about Zelda and I…

Stay tuned for his next epic: TriForcing Your Way into my Shadow Temple

03 Mar 03:36

bye googie

by kris

20150302-googleplus

but don’t worry, the best parts of google+ are going to stay: hangouts and — wait, no, wait what? “photos” and “streams” are staying? no word on hangouts?? oh well. thank you googoid

PAX East is this weekend! Check out what’s going on in America’s Big B, Boston, including:

Chainsawsuit Live

SATURDAY 3/7 2:30PM – 3:30PM – DRAGONFLY THEATRE
Kris Straub (Chainsawsuit, Broodhollow, D&D Intro Animations), Mikey Neumann (Borderlands, the voice of Scooter, The Returners), and friends deliver an hour of comedy, stories, and general rabblerousery.

 

02 Mar 21:15

directedbychuckjones:L.A. Traffic Court, 1963 From a sketchpad...







directedbychuckjones:

L.A. Traffic Court, 1963 From a sketchpad by Chuck Jones, graphite, 9” x 6”. 

Chuck was fond of quoting a teacher he had at Chouinard Art Institute, who said, “You birds have 100,000 bad drawings in you. Start getting rid of them now.”  

26 Jan 21:19

day 4 of 5x3x Facebook challenge.  Fashion illustration and...







day 4 of 5x3x Facebook challenge.  Fashion illustration and SHOES!!!

Another subject that I always love.  I’m obsessed with shoes, total shoe whore and proud to admit it.  Nothing makes my heart flutters more than a beautiful pair of shoes.  Also, I’m always a huge fan of fashion illustration, especially vintage and the Barbiesque ones.

The first painting is from my ‘Summer Fun Girls’ series, this one is titled “Gossip” cause that’s one of the thing us girls do best.  So much fun to hang out with your girlfriends and share a bit of juicy gossip.  I’d like to think I don’t gossip, but…  oh …  I do enjoy them.

Second painting, my Burlina Loubi.  One of my birthday present from Norm.  Definitely one the most comfortable shoes I own.

Third painting, my Valentino Rockstud slingback.  Got this baby in both black and white for the Big Hero 6 wrap party.  Also another super comfy shoes that I know I can dance all night in.

Also, I nominate Christopher Zibach and Brian Kesinger. Look out for their work. Chris has started posting already and they look great!

XO,
Griz

06 Jan 16:48

jaster-firenze

by nobody@flickr.com (derbyblue)

derbyblue posted a photo:

jaster-firenze

10 Dec 19:40

Commision: Sirian concept 03

concept for :iconthe-brade:
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25 Nov 01:51

How did you became Pixar's story artist? I actually need (or maybe some of the people who are now reading this) some motivation or inspiration... because I seem to lose hope in making stories or sketches...

Never lose hope! I gained a lot from going to school with a massively talented group of classmates. They key to improving is having a group of friends whose taste you trust, to give you feedback on your work. If you don’t have an audience at hand, here are three exercises you can do by yourself every day to get better:

1. Draw a four-panel story every night before you go to bed.

2. Sketch a scene from your favorite movie, copying each composition shot-by-shot. Ask yourself why each cut is being made, what statement each new shot is making.

3. If you’re tired of story boarding, try writing poetry or short stories, or even photography. Once you have a poem, story, or photo you like, try adapting your own art into storyboards.

Hope that helps!

20 Nov 19:47

“Artblock” by Schakty* • Blog/Website |...



“Artblock” by Schakty*

• Blog/Website | (www.schakty.com)

CHARACTER DESIGN REFERENCES

Facebook | Pinterest | Twitter | Tumblr | YouTube | DeviantART

20 Nov 17:08

Tree

50 minute sketch 
Video with process here www.youtube.com/watch?v=40GRre…
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19 Nov 20:07

DA:I - Frozen Wastes

by Matt Rhodes

We were discussing some of the many stories you might come across as you explore the wilderness and this one begged to be drawn.
18 Nov 17:53

Today is the release of Dragon Age Inquisition! Here’s...



Today is the release of Dragon Age Inquisition! Here’s some Sera fan art to celebrate the occasion.

18 Nov 17:52

Revenge of the Pantheons : Zeus

Art for :iconofficalrotp:'s project "Revenge of the Pantheons", a table top card game.
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18 Nov 17:51

Revenge of the Pantheons : Artemis

Art for :iconofficalrotp:'s project "Revenge of the Pantheons", a table top card game.
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27 Oct 18:28

harrison2142: lazymercenary: 80s Heroes by Guillaume...













harrison2142:

lazymercenary:

80s Heroes by Guillaume Singelin

All of me yesssssssssss