Posts Tagged Pop Culture

The comic strip in the age of iPad: A talk with Stephan Pastis

Posted by on Friday, 27 January, 2012

Stephan Pastis

Like many of society’s pop culture fixtures, the comic strip is a product of the last century’s dominant medium for information and entertainment, the daily newspaper. But as with most everything associated with the newspaper business, the comic strip finds itself struggling against the harsh reality of ever smaller page real estate, papers shutting down, and generational shifts towards other forms of entertainment.

And while there’s no doubt that comics continue today as a vibrant medium on the web where new voices such as those behind Penny Arcade and The Oatmeal thrive with millions of readers, a glance at the comic strip page in any major metropolitan newspaper gives the impression that papers themselves have given up on new voices that could attract new generation of readers, often times running strips in which the creator no longer is the driving force behind the strip or, in some cases, may have died years ago.

So what does all this mean for the newspaper comic strip artist?  To find out, I thought I’d ask Stephen Pastis, creator of perhaps the last big comic syndicate success story, Pearls Before Swine. Pastis launched his comic strip 10 years ago after a career as a lawyer, and today Pearls Before Swine runs in 650 newspapers worldwide, an impressive number given how fast and far newspaper circulation has been falling.  Pastis recently also became somewhat of a pioneer in the comic strip syndicate world, as he became the first syndicate-based comic strip artist to release a dedicated iPad app with interactive elements wrapped around the strip itself, an app called Only the Pearls.

Below I have some of the highlights from our conversation, but you can also listen to my entire conversation with Stephan in the Soundcloud player below by clicking the big orange button, or download it here to take with you and listen to on your mobile device.

Stephan Pastis & Michael Wolf – GigaOM Podcast Jan 2012 by GigaOM

The decline of newspapers and the future of the comic strip

For someone who makes his living in the daily paper, Pastis admits that the decline of the paper is something he and others in his business think about every day as they look to the future. He said that everyone in the newspaper business is looking for the magic formula, how to stay relevant. What gives him hope, however, is that he thinks people always need news.

“Regardless of what platform they find themselves on, someone has to provide them with their local news, and in theory comics would be a part of that.”

The iPad app

Stephan Pastis Character on Pearls

According to Pastis, an iPad app wasn’t a nice to have, but a necessity. Since approximately 1 in 5 books purchased today are electronic, Pastis knew he was missing an opportunity. He had amassed 18 collections of his comic strip in print, but he didn’t have an e-book.

He also knew that going into this, he wanted to take advantage of the medium, and that’s why he decided to make an enhanced e-book app complete with audio and video interviews, animated strips, as well as interactive components.  He said with print, he had models set for him by artists he had admired, such as Scott Adams (Dilbert) and Gary Larsen (The Far Side), where they would add commentary about the strips below the strips themselves. With apps, his heroes hadn’t gone there before him, so he used the principle that guides him in his strip.

“I used the guide that I use when I do the comic strip, [which] is what would I like to see? What I would like to see is video, audio, animation… a few surprises. I want to be fully immersed in it, don’t just want to turn pages or see just strips I’ve seen before.”

The Oatmeal as a model for the future

The Oatmeal

I asked Pastis about some of the newer artists who are seeing success on the web, like Matthew Inman of The Oatmeal fame, and if these new artists gave him hope. He said that when he’s asked about getting into the business, he points to The Oatmeal and others like Cyanide and Happiness.  He wasn’t sure how you could monetize the audience, but felt good content on the social web would bring the audience. He also said, as a syndicate strip artist who beat the odds, he can see both sides.

“For people that have made it in syndication, sometimes they look at the internet as something that has diluted their fame. They’ve done something very few people can do… The flip side is you can be in your bedroom and have a an audience of a million people with no gatekeeper, and that’s very appealing.”

The power (and danger) of the social web for an artist

He also had some interesting thoughts on connecting with his audience through the social web. He said that nowadays, audiences can sense an intermediary, the voice of “PR”, and things like Twitter and blogs have created the expectation that the artist is going to be the voice they hear.  If you are a wallflower, according to Pastis, this world does not benefit you.

He also said that social media presents a danger to the artist. Artists have, traditionally, created best “in a vacuum,” hearing only their own instinct, and hearing instant feedback through social media could threaten that.

“At the end of the day you are expected to lead. You cannot be whipsawed back and forth by how your audience feels. Ironically, if you follow what they tell you, they won’t like you soon enough. “

I also talked to Stephan about the future of the comic strip three panel convention, about his penchant for making fun of others strips and much more, so I’d encourage you to take a listen above or download the podcast conversation here.

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Gallery: Butcher Kings Slaughter Pop Icons

Posted by on Friday, 14 October, 2011

Artists Alex Pardee and “Skinner” mash sci-fi, comics and a seriously twisted worldview in their new prints, which make brightly colored mincemeat of pop-culture icons.



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What’s Trending: A Sneak Peek at CBS News’s Social News Experiment

Posted by on Sunday, 15 May, 2011

The first thing you’re told about What’s Trending is that “we’re not calling it a web show.” Those are the words of host Shira Lazar, who instead refers to the series launching this Tuesday as an interactive TV show — one with the backing of CBS News, that just happens to be streaming live on Ustream, Livestream and YouTube (thanks to CBS’s pre-existing relationships with those partners).

Created by Disrupt Group and directed by Brett Register, What’s Trending, as gleaned from interviews and sitting in on a rehearsal of the live show last week, is not so much a news series about the Internet as it is a show about current events and pop culture, as seen through the eyes of the Internet.

“Unlike some other shows that include social media as an added tool to the content, our content itself is social, and the show is powered by that conversation and our community,” Lazar said via email. “Everything we do involves digitally connected tools — from how we discover and source stories to how we curate them on the blog and on-air.”

Enabling this process is social media correspondent Melissa Jun Rowley, who will be bringing in comments and questions from Twitter and the chat room during the live show. In addition, Trending has partnered with the Tweetriver platform to display Twitter updates live on air, and “interest network” Sulia to help curate trending topics online.

The studio itself is in an impressive-looking loft overlooking the Hollywood hills, right down the street from the historic Grauman’s Chinese Theater. Constructed from scratch about a month ago, the space represents a significant commitment from CBS — which at this stage has greenlit the show for the next six months, thanks to sponsorship by AT&T.

Guests appearing in the first episode will include The Young Turks‘s Cenk Uygur, Dancing with the Stars contestant Chelsea Kane, and political consultant Joe Trippi, and the show structure at this point is versatile enough to accommodate any sort of breaking news or exploding viral phenomenon. In last Wednesday’s test show, politics and tech news were in equal proportion to funny viral videos and actor interviews, either via Skype or in studio. YouTube Trends will provide videos of note each week, Good Magazine offers profiles of people using social media for good causes and Column Five Media is on board to create dynamic video infographics similar to the one below.

The Tuesday at 1 PM ET airtime was very specifically picked because, according to Lazar, it’s the highest-trafficked time online, and in addition the show will be packaged for VOD delivery on YouTube and CBS’s digital networks.

But who will watch live? “Definitely people possibly at work, working from home — which many are these days — and even college students out of class or after school. Part of this is that we’re early days for doing this, so we’re experimenting, and we might just discover over time there’s a better way to do it. Thankfully, we have that ability to experiment, make those changes and listen to our audience,” Lazar said.

The What’s Trending blog offers up daily updates, and Lazar promises that should a story break, she’ll still shoot standalone video segments (similar to her past work for CBS News interviewing breaking viral video stars). The key to the show, though, will be capturing that up-to-the-minute feel on a weekly basis.

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Pop Surrealists Spin South Park’s Little Angels

Posted by on Sunday, 27 March, 2011

South Park redefined pop culture as we know it. Now, 15 pop artists are redefining South Park for the animated show’s 15th birthday.



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War of the Underworlds: A Pop-Culture Showdown

Posted by on Tuesday, 22 February, 2011

Is your Underworld Don Delillo’s novel or a Kate Beckinsale film? Or is it plain old hell? Wired charts this subterranean landscape.



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Lastest Gadget News

Posted by on Sunday, 8 August, 2010

WATCH: Your Smart Phone Is About to Get Smarter
Credit card companies are working some smart phones to replace cards. Credit card – Smartphone – Hardware – Business – Technology
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Survey targets teen drivers who don’t pay attention
One minute you’re LOL over a text from a friend, and the next – OMG – you’ve hit a car at the mall parking lot.
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How much homework is too much?
Q: My son will be starting the sixth grade at a new public charter school. This school uses a classical curriculum that does not draw from pop culture and sets high academic standards. The kids wear uniforms and are punished if they misbehave.
Read more on The News & Observer