Archive for February, 2009

Hippasus Gurgles: Meta Sequential Art: Infinite Sequences

In my previous installment, I attempted to establish that mathematics is a sequential art. I think it’s already time to get meta: sequential art about sequences.


All of the works you think of when referring to “sequential art” deal with finite sequences. At some point, the panels stop and the comic ends. Let’s talk a little about the loss of intuition, vague sense of the world spinning, and loss of appetite that comes with infinite sequences.
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Strip Search: Cathy

On alternating Thursdays, Jennifer M. Babcock reviews and recommends comic strips available in print and on the web.

by Jennifer M. Babcock

I have a confession to make. I get Cathy e-mailed to me every day.

I don’t subscribe to Cathy because I feel like it is relevant to my life or because I necessarily enjoy it. No, I’m a regular reader because ever since Cathy and Irving got engaged on Valentine’s Day, 2004, I’ve been curious if the strip’s character dynamics were going to change accordingly. After all, one of the founding concepts behind Cathy for over 25 years was the protagonist’s “singledom” and struggles as a working woman who can’t lay off the potato chips.

When the strip first appeared in 1976, women’s rights were being newly asserted at work and in relationships; Cathy’s character was supposed to reflect that generation’s working, single, independent women along with their fears, uncertainties, and challenges. The concept was quite novel for the time – how many mainstream newspaper comics in the 1970s addressed women’s rights or even had a single, working woman as the main, and in this case, title character?
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Jaded: An All True, Somewhat Sarcastic, Tale of Television Heroism

Die by the Pen, and its author Jared Gniewek, will return to their regular slot next Wednesday. This week, Jade Jordan, former reality television superhero takes an intentionally (for the most part) humorous look back at his day(s) in the limelight.

by Jade Jordan

Hello, I’m Jade Jordan, you may remember me as TV’s Darren Passarello …

nitro-g-normal

From the first season of Who Wants to Be a Superhero?

Nothing? Come on…

Nitro G? 

nitro-thumbs

Right…

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The Doctor Is In: Bring on the Bad Guys

On alternating Tuesdays, Allan “Doc” Dorison operates on a specific part of popular culture.

by Allan Dorison

Webster’s has four definitions for the word villain.

Definition 1: an uncouth person. Definition 2: a deliberate scoundrel or criminal. Definition 3: a character in a story or play who opposes the hero. Definition 4: one blamed for a particular evil or difficulty.

For this instance I’m going to focus on definition 3… with which I disagree.   I think, in the best cases at least, it’s the hero who opposes the villain. That’s what drives the plot.

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Monday Media Madness: The Eisner… err… Oscar Goes to…

Every Monday, Matt. Murray reviews, revisits and rambles about comics, cartoons and their interactions in and with related media.

by Matt. Murray

At this year’s Academy Awards, Heath Ledger made a certain kind of cinematic history by becoming the first actor to win an Oscar for a role originated in the pages of a comic book. As a nominee, he followed in the footsteps of acting greats Al Pacino and Paul Newman, who were likewise recognized in the Best Supporting Actor category for their respective turns as funny book villains in Dick Tracy and Road to Perdition. (Note: William Hurt was the only other actor ever nominated for a comic book movie, again for Best Supporting Actor as a villain, in 2005’s A History of Violence. However, his character was completely a construct of the film’s creative team, and didn’t actually appear in the graphic novel.)

Ledger Joker

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