CBS Sunday Morning Features New Yorker Cartoonists

Yesterday morning CBS Sunday Morning ran a nice little feature entitled “Drawn to Success” about The New Yorker and its cartoonists. (Thanks to my father-in-law for calling to remind me it was on!)

It was a nice enough little thing and it was fun to see where my cartoons go to be rejected. They presented a nice selection of cartoons including fellow Chicagoan Pat Byrnes’ “…half a sandwich.”

Mankoff cleans up nice, but I thought the “The New Yorker is to cartoons what God is to religion” comment was perhaps a tad much and prompts this brief rant:

The New Yorker is a great magazine and presents its cartoons and cartoonists extremely well. I’d say they’re certainly the gag cartoonist’s dream gig, and I hope to see one of mine in the “yes” basket someday. But it’s not the only place for great cartoons.

Reader’s Digest, Good Housekeeping, Harvard Business Review, Barron’s, Forbes… All quality publications publishing quality cartoons.

Anyway, it’s nice to see cartoons and cartoonists getting some decent press for once.

Posted in TV

Inside the Cartoonist’s Studio – Malcolm Mayes

Inside the Cartoonist's Studio

This week Inside the Cartoonist’s Studio has an international flavor (or “flavour” as long as we’re being worldly) as we welcome Edmonton Journal editorial cartoonist, founder of Artizans.com, and just all around good guy, Malcolm Mayes!

1) If you were to cast a movie entirely with cartoon characters, what movie would it be and who would star in it?

I’d cast Homer Simpson and SpongeBob Squarepants in a buddy film — sort of a Dumb and Dumber film about discovery. Homer would discover he lusts after BBQ pork, while SpongeBob would discover there’s someone even dumber than Patrick.

2) You’re a syndicate editor launching a new comic strip. What’s the worst possible title you can think of?

Hagar the Horrible by Chris Browne.

3) A light bulb over a cartoon’s head signifies an idea, while a string of random characters denotes swearing. Invent a new cartooning icon and what it means.

********

This would denote a quote that was so idiotic, that is wasn’t worth repeating. For example, if President George Bush was asked to justify his Iraq policy, he might reply…

“*********, *********** *** ** ******* ** ********!”

Thanks a bunch, Malcolm! Be sure to check out Malcolm and other fine cartoonists at Artizans.com!

Cartoon WordCount

According to the site, WordCount.org is “is an artistic experiment in the way we use language. It presents the 86,800 most frequently used English words, ranked in order of commonness.”

It’s also a great way to completely waste about a half hour.

For the record, “cartoon” just gets beat out by “grandma”, but totally kicks “lavender”‘s ass! Take that “lavender”!

“Cartoonist” however ranks much lower, sharing the screen with “caecum” and “rsa”. Yeesh!

“Josie and the Pussycats” – Review

Sex kittens

Let’s see… “Josie and the Pussycats is like a Twinkie.” No, I used a food reference to start my Punisher review.

OK, OK, cat references… “Hairball.” No, I used that in my Garfield review. Dang!

Umm… “Josie and the… Wussie-Cats!” Wow, not only is that lame, it doesn’t make any sense.

Well, lack of a pithy opening aside, obviously Josie and the Pussycats isn’t great art. It’s not even a great movie. And, to be honest, no one really intended it to be.

It’s pretty fluffy and formulaic (maybe Twinkie will work…) but when that’s all a movie is aspiring to be it’s hard to really come down on it.

Based on the Archie/Hanna-Barbera characters from the 70’s, Josie is basically a way for teen/tween girls to break up an afternoon of shopping at the mall and giggling about boys.

It’s actually cast quite well. Rachael Leigh Cook stars as the red/orange/pink-haired spunky guitarist and brings the requisite level of mousy cuteness. Tara Reid plays drummer Melody Valentine with a sexy saccharine smoky stupidity that’s honestly so good you have to wonder. And Rosario Dawson rounds out the trio by stealing most scenes as sassy bassist Valerie Brown.

Alan Cumming and Parker Posey are both unfortunately simply out for paychecks as the crafty do-badders looking to use the Pussycats to hide subliminal messages to control the nation’s teenagers’ spending habits.

Parker especially turns in a performance that makes me embarrassed for her. Where is the Dairy Queen community actress or the crazed catalog snob I loved so much in recent Christopher Guest films?! You can do better Parker.

Anyway, as frothy as the movie is, it actually takes a misstep and tries parody/show us the dangers of product placement and trend chasing.

Throughout the movie the frames are peppered with company logos and products to drive home the point that this is bad! Not only is it heavy handed and unnecessary, I gotta believe that these companies shelled out some good dough to be included, which just sort of nullifies the whole stupid moral anyway.

Yes, the musical montages are lame and numerous as we see the girls giggling, crying and washing cars, but there’s actually some funny material every so often.

My favorite is a scene where the girls attend a party and we get a peek into their thoughts. Josie and Valerie are both frightened and wary of their new-found fame, but Melody is singing “If You’re Happy and You Know It” in her head while clapping to herself. I also enjoyed the voice of subliminal doom being the MovieFone guy.

So, if you like cute young girls wearing felt cat ears and little else (and who doesn’t?!), Josie and the Pussycats isn’t a bad way to waste 98 minutes, but it’s certainly not the attack on commercialism that the directors tried to cram in either. It’s at best a guilty pleasure and at worst your typical teen flick.

Oh! Oh! I got it! I got my opening!

Josie and the Pussycats is a Fig Newton! It’s kinda soft and sweet and it’s trying to appear to be good for you when in the end it’s just junk food!”

(I know it’s a food reference, but I really like Fig Newtons.)