Meanwhile… Desi’s Throuple

National Cartoonists Society

I was floored to find out that I had been nominated for Best Online Longform Comic by the members of the National Cartoonists Society. This is my second nomination in two years, and I'm overwhelmed by the honor!

Also nominated this year are two powerhouse cartoonists. Jason Chatfield is a New Yorker cartoonist whose longform comic "You're Not A Real Parent Until..." started as a special feature at The New Yorker's website. It reassures all parents that everything’s going to be totally fine — whether it’s accepting dried vomit as a constant presence or learning to fear silence!

Evan Dahm's Third Voice is a tour de force of visual storytelling. The story is an ambitious fantasy graphic novel following wandering scavengers in an ending world. Spondule and Navichet are set in "an invented world in a state of apocalyptic crisis, and the precarious lives of many people therein." 

The complete list of nominees can be found here. They include:

Variety Entertainment: Kieran Castano; Chuck Dillon; Bob Weber, Jr.

Advertising/Product Illustration: Chuck Dillon; Sam Grinberg; Pashur House

Book Illustration: Landis Blair; Danesh Mohiuddin; Tom Richmond

Online Comics / Short Form: Sarah Anderson; Jim Benton; Dee Fish

Comic Book: Jesus Hervas; Kelly Phillips; Jay Stephens

Gag Cartoons: Tyson Cole; Dan Misdea; Benjamin Schwartz

Graphic Novel: Darrin Bell; Sarah Bollinger; Daniel Clowes

Magazine/Newspaper Illustration: Jason Chatfield; Nick Galifianakis; Johnny Sampson

Newspaper Comic Strips: Tauhid Bondia; Hector Cantu; Liniers

Online Comics / Long Form: Jason Chatfield; Evan Dahm; Brad Guigar

Editorial Cartoons: Michael de Adder; Ruben Bolling; Michael Ramirez

Newspaper Panels: Dave Blazek; Nick Galifianakis; Wayno

Winners will be announced at the 78th Annual Reuben Awards Dinner in San Diego, CA on August 23rd, 2024

Buy “Stripped” today!

feature-posterMy friends Dave Kellett and Fred Schroeder have an event today (no foolin’), and I want you to participate. Go to http://www.strippedfilm.com/ for details, but here are the highlights: We’re going to do a big push to tell people to make their purchase today. We want to give this movie a big push to get it wide recognition. We’re going to try to get as much notoriety for the movie as possible by making it #1 on iTunes. And we can do it if we act together. Here’s the link to get it from iTunes. Here’s the first five minutes of the film. Folks, Kellett and Schroeder have made what will undoubtedly become the finest documentary on the art of cartooning ever. This goes waaaaaaay beyond “Print vs. Web.” This is a sensitive, moving, endearing, warm all-encompassing look at cartooning from several different perspectives. Heck, I’m even in it! It shows people who couldn’t possibly have anything at all in common all telling remarkably similar stories about their passion for the craft. It talks about the very nature of creativity. It talks about thunderous successes and heartbreaking failures. But mostly, it talks about cartoonists and their burning need to make comics. But, listen… don’t take my word for it. All you need to know is this: Bill Watterson drew his first public cartoon since the last Calvin and Hobbes to promote this movie. Can you imagine how many offers he’s had in all those (almost 20) years?! — how many good causes… fun projects… deserving people? He quietly said no to them. And he said Yes to “Stripped.” If that doesn’t make you ache to own this film, then I got nothing. You’re going to watch this movie once and then sit there in quiet awe as the credits roll. And then you’re going to listen to it over and over and over in the background as you pencil or ink or sketch or wash dishes or… well, you get the point. This movie goes beyond good… it’s important. You’ll never look at your drawing board / Cintiq / sketchbook the same again.