Chris also did Obama and McCain. Have a piece of Chris in your life by ordering his superior toys.
Friday, January 30, 2009
1982 Brik Blastoff, First of a long line
Chris also did Obama and McCain. Have a piece of Chris in your life by ordering his superior toys.
Labels:
1980,
1982,
Brik Blastoff,
chris peterson,
sci fi,
spumco toys
Preview Excerpt of Conservatism part 2
Disney's studio was extremely conservative in its content. Their characters and attitudes were wholesome and generic, never veering into the territory of the specific individual - because conservatives naturally distrust anybody that has a unique personality. Disney himself admitted it many times. He distrusted anybody that stood out from the crowd.
On the other hand, the studio experimented in the advancement of skills. They believed in "quality" which in the 1930s partly meant extreme inhuman otherworldly phenomenal ability. Nobody before the mid 60s ever expected that famous people would ever be average. We all took it for granted that if you were on TV, or in the movies, on radio, sold records, were a politician or whatever that you must be some amazingly gifted accomplished person. Whether you were a liberal or a conservative, you shouldn't be rich and famous unless you could do something that hardly anyone else can do.
.....on to other classic animators, some liberal, some conservative in their approaches...
Every cartoonist on this page shared an important trait, but then differed in how they applied it.
Who I Saw On The News
Well I'm out of practice on caricatures, so I thought I'd warm up last night for a new project by doing some straight ahead sketches off the TV.
This one's from memory. I can't seem to make him primitive enough yet. He's from the caveman network. He has a show that is about nothing else except how the President is a bum and he'd better fail. He'll be so happy if he's right and America dies. Every night for a whole hour that's what he has to say. It's hilarious.
Labels:
caricature
Thursday, January 29, 2009
Wednesday, January 28, 2009
Mutant Cartoon Creatures From the Netherworld
When I was a kid I read just about all the funny books -as long as they were based on preposterous ideas that no one in their right mind should accept -
like
Men In Long Underwear who beat the crap out of each other while the police stand by and allow it:
Dead cartoon humans were OK too.
THE DOG NOSE ON HUMANS OFFENCE
How do you decide when the human ear is appropriate and when it's more logical to add the dog ears to the human face?
I am dying to know how old time cartoonists decided which creatures were allowed the gifts of intelligence, opposable thumbs or pants. Talk about playing God! Every cartoonist has as much power as the Almighty in making arbitrary decisions about which of his creatures get the good or bad end of the stick.
It's probably more likely that it was unconscious conservative auto-pilot drawing, never realizing how much more bizarre half-way cartoon characters are.
The reason I suspect conservatism as the culprit is that if it wasn't, there would be many funny variations on the idea.
How about a realistic dog that stands on his hind legs but has a human nose?
Or a man with Crab eyes? A filter-feeding flesh colored shark that walks on realistic human legs with no pants, but a tuxedo jacket and a duck beak on top of his head?
How about an eel in a Burka? I mean, this could go on and on. It has limitless potential for fun.
This tradition really creeped me out as a kid, but I've come to accept it as an adult and intend to bring it back in all its former glory - and then to take it to more extreme lengths of outrage against the senses.
Labels:
Carl Barks,
Comic Book,
conservatism,
lost cartoon traditions
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