Cartoon Close-Up – Robert Half

Cartoon Close-Up is a recurring feature where I highlight Andertoons cartoon subscriberscustom cartoon clients, and customers who just buy the occasional cartoon.

Cartoon Close-Up Robert Half Technology Blog

This edition’s answers come from custom cartoon client Clea Badion at Robert Half.

1) Tell me a little about yourself and your job.

I’m a freelance writer, editor and content manager. Currently, I’m a blog manager for Robert Half Technology. I plan, write and edit content for the blog, working closely with the Robert Half Technology brand team. I’ve worked with Robert Half, mostly in a freelance capacity, for almost 15 years. I’ve been fortunate to get regular, interesting work from the company, and being a freelancer gives me a lot of flexibility with my schedule.

2) How do you use your custom cartoons from Andertoons?

IT professionals are our audience, and they’re a group that can be challenging to reach and engage. Our blog content includes career advice for tech professionals and hiring managers, trends impacting the industry and jobs, and suggestions on what programming languages are most in demand and why. The cartoons are a fantastic way to engage this audience in a different way, and they always perform well. Sometimes we post them on their own, but recently we’ve been integrating them into posts on the same topic. They make an otherwise straight-forward post more visually engaging and, of course, funny!

We use the cartoons on social channels, too, and they not only get a lot of engagement, but they also drive traffic to our blog.

3) Please give me an example of how someone has responded to a cartoon.

When we shared a comic on the topic of girls who code, we used the hashtag #ilooklikeanengineer. The woman who started that movement, Isis Anchalee, retweeted it with some kind words and we consequently got massive engagement on the post. It was very cool to make that connection with someone who led a social media movement

4) Which cartoon is your personal favorite?

I have many favorites. This is a recent one created to go with a story about tech nightmares. We posted it around Halloween and I love how it turned out:

Custom Cartoon 1

This one about how hard it is to find .NET developers still makes me laugh. It’s very specific to this audience, obviously, but I think any hiring manager having trouble filling a specific role can relate to it:

Custom Cartoon 3

I also really like this one about things you can’t put on your LinkedIn profile:

Custom Cartoon 2

5) Where online can people find out more about you?

They can check out my LinkedIn profile.

6) Do you have any questions for me?

Yes! How and when did you decide you wanted to create cartoons for a living? Was this your first choice as a career? How do you prepare for a career as a cartoonist?

As a kid I always read the comics and thought it would be pretty much the best job ever. Turns out I was right.

I actually went to school for music and then worked in fastener sales, metal coil distribution, and advertising. It was only after my wife and I knew our first child was on the way that I decided I’d quit my job and try to make a living as a cartoonist full time. It’s a crazy journey.

If you want to know more you can check out my talk at the National Cartoonists Society event last year.

 Thanks so much to Clea for her time and terrific answers!

If you use Andertoons cartoons and would like to be featured here on the blog and in our monthly newsletter, drop me a line!

Spider-Man’s Christmas Coloring Book

Christmas with Spider-Man Coloring Book

I love Christmas, and I love Spider-Man. So when I saw this Spider-Man’s Christmas coloring book on eBay, I knew I had to get it and share it.

Written by Suzanne Weyn, drawn by Jim Mooney & John Tartaglione, and printed in 1984, this wonderfully weird Christmas coloring book lets you color scenes like Peter Parker walking…

Christmas with Spider-Man Coloring Book

Peter Parker at work…

Christmas with Spider-Man Coloring Book

and Peter Parker shopping.

Christmas with Spider-Man Coloring Book

But then things start to get interesting as Peter gets his foot stepped on…

Christmas with Spider-Man Coloring Book

gets knocked down by an old lady…

Christmas with Spider-Man Coloring Book

and gets the holiday blues.

Christmas with Spider-Man Coloring Book

OK, we’re already 10 pages in, not much has happened, and we’ve ignored the fact that Peter’s Spidey-Sense would have totally negated the toe stomp and the cab grab, but don’t worry – Aunt May to the rescue!

Christmas with Spider-Man Coloring Book

And things start to heat up. Or do they?

Christmas with Spider-Man Coloring Book

Turns out that landlord is also conveniently Spider-Man’s arch enemy!

Christmas with Spider-Man Coloring Book

Now, 14 pages into this 32-page coloring book we finally get some Spider-Man.

Christmas with Spider-Man Coloring Book

I don’t want to ruin the rest of the story for you, but it includes Aunt May apparently sprinting and beating Spider-Man to the Green Goblin’s apartment…

Christmas with Spider-Man Coloring Book

an army of Goblin elf robots…

Christmas with Spider-Man Coloring Book

and Spider-Man giving the Goblin the ol’ Gwen Stacy treatment.

Christmas with Spider-Man Coloring Book

Wanna see how it ends? Feel free to download a free PDF of the entire Spider-Man’s Christmas coloring book and get coloring!

Cartoon Close-Up – Busey

Cartoon Close-Up is a recurring feature where I highlight Andertoons cartoon subscriberscustom cartoon clients, and customers who just buy the occasional cartoon.

A Cartoon Close-Up – Busey

This edition’s answers come from subscriber Erin Brownlow at Busey.

1) Tell me a little about yourself and your job.

I support Busey’s commercial & cash management sales teams and manage our corporate websites. I love that my job involves doing something a little different every day—research, event planning, writing. . . you name it. I am fluent in in movie quotes, love Excel and have a passion for good grammar.

2) How do you use the cartoons from your Andertoons subscription?

A Cartoon Close-Up – Busey

I use Andertoons in weekly communications to business partners and centers of influence in the communities we serve. They provide some much needed levity to emails about financial topics like rates, fraud warnings, regulations and more.

I also love finding and sharing cartoons with my coworkers. The wide variety ensures I can find something for any situation. I also highly recommend signing up for the Daily Cartoon. It’s nice to open my email first thing in the morning and see something fun amid all the financial newsletters.

3) Please give me an example of how someone has responded to a cartoon.

One recipient told me the cartoon is the main reason she opens my emails, and as a bonus, she sometimes reads the rest of the copy!

4) Which cartoon is your personal favorite?

I absolutely love #6326.

A Cartoon Close-Up – Busey

I think we all have both a loathing and a fear of the reply all button, whether it’s because you receive a million responses to something inane or accidentally hit reply all on something you definitely don’t want to share.

5) Where online can people find out more about you?

Visit our website at busey.com to learn more about how Busey can help you achieve your financial dreams, or link with me directly at https://www.linkedin.com/in/erinbrownlow.

6) Do you have any questions for me?

Just three:

1. What is your name?
2.What is your quest?
3. What is the air-speed velocity of an unladen swallow?

Ok, maybe one more. You can identify Andertoons just by looking at them – they have a very unique style. Do you draw/paint/doodle in other styles just for fun?

Not really. The thing is I’m completely self-taught. Growing up I of course copied a lot of other cartoonists; I used to trace Peanuts and Spider-Man, and I tried really hard to ape Don Martin there for a while. But other than your standard school art classes, I have no formal art education at all.

As a result, my style evolved really slowly over about 20 years or so and I’m just now getting happy with it. So, long story short, I really don’t know any other way to draw, and even if I wanted to it’d probably be another 20 years before I got good at it.

Also:

1. Mark Anderson.

2. To draw cartoons.

3. “If we settle on an intermediate Strouhal value of 0.3: We can estimate the airspeed of the European Swallow to be roughly 11 meters per second (15 beats per second * 0.73 meters per beat).”

Thanks so much to Erin for her time and terrific answers!

If you use Andertoons cartoons and would like to be featured here on the blog and in our monthly newsletter, drop me a line!

(Thanks to to Jonathan Corum for the swallow info!)