You are NOT an island

Posted by neal in blog on December 7th, 2005 |  No Comments »

I’ve posted before about Heaven is a Hotel, but the situation requires a follow-up.

The voting for the KRNU Top 100 is nearing an end, and so I’m lobbying the listeners for votes for HiaH’s “Second Story Man.” I’m not asking for people who don’t know the song to vote for it, but if you know the song, love the song, and haven’t voted for the song, please do. E-mail your votes to krnu2005@hotmail.com, and while you’re at it, vote for as many other songs as you’d like. We add up all the votes to determine which song is #1, so just list your favorite songs from the past year in no particular order.

If you’re not sure what that song was, click on the link for the previous post and you can download the song from their website. Chances are, if you listened to KRNU in 2005, you know the song, and you’ll know if you love it or not.

And then listen to the Top 100 on KRNU Monday through Friday next week, 5-7pm.

It’s a little late…

Posted by neal in blog on November 23rd, 2005 |  No Comments »

…but here are my nieces, Miqaela and Melany, on Halloween.

HELP: childhood superhero fantasies

Posted by neal in blog on November 21st, 2005 |  1 Comment »

This is a little bit of documentary work, but did any of you

1. want to grow up to be a superhero when you were a kid

and / or

2. dress up as a superhero for Halloween one year AND have pictures to prove it?

Part of the process

Posted by neal in blog on November 8th, 2005 |  1 Comment »

Since the Journal Star’s website decided to run a Dave Nabity file photo for their 2006 election preview instead of their own artwork (which was on the front page of the print edition), I thought I’d share it here.

Also, I am a big fan of seeing the various stages that go into making any kind of visual art. In case there is anyone out there like me who enjoys this type of thing, I present to you the Three Stages of Today’s Illustration:

1. The pencil sketch

2. The ink wash / line work

3. The finished colors

He returns

Posted by neal in blog on November 7th, 2005 |  No Comments »

A good portion of my web hits lately have to be credited to google’s image search.

I traced it back to a basketball message board – a Jesus / basketball discussion started, and someone googled “jesus hoops” and found this – one of my most popular cartoons ever.

Image hosted by Photobucket.com

Jesus made a lot of cameos in my Daily Nebraskan cartooning days. But moreso than that, a lot of embedded religious symbolism did too. I had this idea of making editorial cartoons a modern version of symbolically-layered religious art like you see from the Renaissance. I wanted scholars to one day come along and say “Well, the late 20th and early 21st centuries were pretty much devoid of that type of art where a bunch of religious references are just kind of tossed in, except for this kid in the human-clumping known as Lincoln, Nebraska, who apparently thought he would make some kind of Biblically-literate cartoons that would please no one, as they served to offend those who would care enough to understand the references.”

So this, the first of those cartoons, made its splash in March 2000, I was given a little dose of the “heretic” / “you don’t understand what you’re talking about” treatment, and the cartoon faded away to a memory for some former college students. Well now it’s experiencing a life of its own thanks to google image search, as it has spread to a half-dozen or so more message boards and now it’s appearing on some blogs too.

Good messiahs keep popping back up, I guess.

In the interest of fairness…

Posted by neal in blog on October 28th, 2005 |  No Comments »

At cagle.com, in reaction to the nearly-identical Rosa Parks cartoons, they’ve got a blog post from cartoonist Mike Lester on the issue. It raises a point that, in my disgust, I hadn’t even considered:

I’m curious and -not that they need defending, but I would like to believe that a great many in our profession are dictated their cartoons and the heft of the message by some cleverless editor who assumes to feed readers what they think readers need to be fed. Since when do we give people what they expect? It’s my belief that no job pays enough to illustrate opinions that are not ones own but the true pity is that we’ll never know what kind of work would be produced without creative constraints.

I like this. He gives these cartoonists an out, but if they choose not to take it, he hits them with a well-deserved insult that stings more when applied to a cartoonist who should know better. While it is tempting to believe that there’s no way so many cartoonists could think alike in such a dull way, it’s not exactly easy to believe that the same number of editors share the same brain (cue some quip about 10 editors having one whole brain between them).

And let’s give these guys the benefit of the doubt and operate under the assumption that these editors forced this identical idea upon their staff cartoonists. If so many editors have the same concept of dull cartoons for a somber moment, who is to blame other than the years of cartoonists who’ve worked so hard (or not) to build this precedent?

Pat yourselves on the back.

Posted by neal in blog on October 26th, 2005 |  2 Comments »

Give an editorial cartoonist a forum, and he’ll talk about how it’s a shrinking field, how cartoonists are losing their relevance, how papers are opting for syndication rather than the unique voice of their staff cartoonist, blah blah blah. Look at what the brilliant minds of our nation’s finest have to say upon the death of Rosa Parks.

(the following cartoons are from today’s cartoons at cagle.com)

Mike Keefe at The Denver Post:

Robert Ariail of The State in South Carolina:

Ed Stein of the Rocky Mountain News:

Jeff Koterba of the Omaha World Herald:

Mark Streeter of the Savannah Morning News:

Jeff Stahler of the Columbus Dispatch:

How relevant, valuable or unique are you when all you can do is come up with the exact same idea as a half dozen of your peers? And these are just the cartoonists on Cagle’s syndicate.

Here’s a real statement. At 10:35pm, on October 24th, 2005, at the very moment I heard that Rosa Parks had passed away, I made the following comment:

I predict no less than 27 cartoons tomorrow with God driving a bus in heaven and saying “Why don’t you come sit up here with me.”

Elmo gets what’s coming

Posted by neal in blog on October 25th, 2005 |  No Comments »

photo by April Yi / Wall Street JournalLong-time readers of this blog may remember my encounter with Elmo from March. What started out as an innocent encounter for the purposes of my niece’s Elmo-viewing pleasure turned into something much more bizarre.

Well, in the past few days, you may have seen a story making the rounds about Elmo getting arrested.

Just know that justice still lives on, even in the cracked, dirty streets of Los Angeles.

Leflerpalooza was amazing

Posted by neal in blog on October 24th, 2005 |  1 Comment »

I really doubt any Lefler 6th through 8th graders will ever read this, but they put on a great show today.

The “Lefler in Action” club put on Leflerpalooza, which, as I posted earlier, was a way to show off what the after school clubs have been up to this quarter.

I was really proud of the D.A.V.E. (our film club, renamed “The Department of Audio and Video Entertainment”) club, and we had six of our best movies played for the audience. CJ’s story of two high schoolers going into the military, Carlos’s parody of the crocodile hunter, Wanufi’s spies at Lefler, Francesca’s spies elsewhere, Maggie’s more emotional music video (for lack of a better term), and Sara’s comedic how-to, which was a big hit with the crowd.

There were some other movies that didn’t get finished in time for the show, but they’ll hopefully be done in time to include them on our D.A.V.E. DVD. I’m going to try to put all the movies online here, or at very least, excerpts from them.

What I saw of all the clubs was impressive, and as proud as I was of my D.A.V.E. peeps, the School of Rock club blew me away. Two different groups played, with the first playing a Blink 182 song and the second playing two Green Day songs. These guys learned all of this over nine weeks, and I was amazed.

I think some of us were a little worried that Leflerpalooza wouldn’t quite go off as we’d imagined. I think if anything, it went way better. Sitting in the crowd today, I really felt like I was seeing something special. Like one day, I’m going to be able to say “I remember seeing their stuff back when they were just in middle school!”

Leflerpalooza this Monday!

Posted by neal in blog on October 21st, 2005 |  No Comments »

Monday at Lefler Middle School (roughly 48th and Randolph) at 5pm is Leflerpalooza – the showcase of what all the after-school clubs have been working on.

Although the newspaper and comic book clubs haven’t quite panned out to what we’d hoped, I’m still really proud of all three of my groups. The film club (DAVE, for short) has been amazing – some really wonderful people to work with – and I’m really excited for everyone to see what these guys have made.

It’s open to the public, so come see what these guys are up to. There’s also a dance club, School of Rock (these guys actually learned their instruments and learned how to be a band), and others.