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What’s in a name? 08/16/2011
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My friend Fritz Wall, a fellow single panel cartoonist, emailed me the other day asking for some quick feedback on a sketch. I loved his idea — my only constructive criticism was that the baby’s name he used was too unusual. I suggested maybe changing it to “something else more 'common' - like Allison or Alex or any other name that people are used to seeing. Otherwise it might trip people up while reading it.”

Fritz took the advice to heart and said he’d change it to Skip. Instead he ended up
using another name.

I guess it’s fitting. This kid has almost as much hair as I do.  Well done, Fritz!
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Another bad cartoon idea 07/31/2011
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It’s been several months since I posted a bad cartoon idea, so how about another one? 

Yesterday I came up with an idea while hopped up on coffee. I sketched it out and it seemed funny at the time. But when the caffeine wore off, I wasn’t so sure about it. It suddenly seemed cheesy and, well, lame. So I left the sketchpad on the desk and figured I’d look at it a few hours later with a fresh eye.

At one point, my wife came upon the sketch (we share a desk in the office) and told me she didn’t like it.

“It’s kind of obvious humor,” she said. “Also, it seems like that joke’s been done before.” 


Crap. That's not what I wanted to hear. 

I went and looked at the sketch again. I didn't laugh. (Well, I kind of chuckled at Cookie Monster's line.) The bottom line was my wife was right: the idea just wasn't very good. 

Here’s the sketch. Even though I'm scrapping this idea, I might use Cookie Monster’s line in another cartoon.

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Out of curiosity, I Googled “Elmo’s Thong." Plenty of people have used this joke, including another cartoonist. 
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Geek Papas 07/12/2011
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A few friends of mine just launched Geek Papas - "a site and a podcast aimed squarely at proud geek parents who have unbridled passion for their kids and want to share their lifelong love of all things Geeky with them.  We are movie buffs, comic collectors, cartoonists, musicians, artists, sports fans, and more." 

Justin Thompson (cartoonist of “Mythtickle”), Tom Racine (cartoonist and host of the excellent podcast Tall Tale Radio) and Irma Eriksson (cartoonist of “Imy”) have joined forces to create Geek Papas. Check it out!
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Pinkerton hits #600! 07/01/2011
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A friend of mine, Mike Witmer, is the creator of a hilarious strip called Pinkerton. It features four main characters—Tucker (a rabbit), Buckley (a fox), Steve (a guinea pig) and Martin (a moose)—who live in a national park called Pinkerton Park.

I’ve been following Pinkerton since it first began almost exactly four years ago. Today is strip #600 – quite a milestone. Go read Pinkerton and have a good laugh.

Congratulations Mike!
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Mill Valley Life 06/25/2011
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Liz Greer, who is the editor of a blog called “Mill Valley Life,” recently interviewed me about my cartooning and greeting cards. It was a pleasure to be featured in her blog – you can read the piece here.

“
Mill Valley Life” is updated nearly every day, with interesting stories about Mill Valley and the people who live there.

Thanks Liz – it was fun talking with you. 

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Fun at Trader Joe's 03/16/2011
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I recently took my two-and-a-half-year-old daughter, Kate, to Trader Joe’s. She likes coming along on shopping trips because she really enjoys looking at people. But she especially likes going to Trader Joe’s because the cashiers give out stickers to kids.

Most little kids like stickers. Kate loves stickers. It’s almost an unhealthy obsession. The only thing she likes even more than stickers is balloons. One time, my wife bought her a sheet of stickers that were all balloons and Kate’s head almost exploded.

Along with giving out stickers, Trader Joe’s also has this game they do for little kids. Every day, they hide this stuffed donkey toy somewhere in the store. If a kid spots the donkey, they tell the cashier where it is. Then they get a piece of candy.

As we got in the car, I said to Kate: “Remember the game at the store? When you look for the toy donkey?” 

She replied with an emphatic “Yes!”

Fifteen minutes later, we’re in the store walking around. At one point, I looked down at Kate in the cart and noticed that her head was moving slooooowly from left to right. The look on her face was deadly serious.

 “What’re you doing?” I said.

“Looking for the donkey,” she said, in almost a whisper. Then she continued to scan the store, like a robot.

I had forgotten about the donkey game.

“Okay, good job,” I said. “Keep looking.”

About ten minutes later, I was grabbing gallon of milk and almost dropped it when Kate yelled “THERE IT IS!”

She found the donkey – but I couldn’t see it.

“Where?”

She said, “There!”

“In the refrigerator?”

“No, no! Up THERE!”

The donkey was perched about four feet above the milk section, on a little ledge.

“Good job,” I said.

The entire time Kate was looking for the donkey---a good 20 minutes---she had the demeanor of a Secret Service agent, searching for a lone gunman in a crowd. (I know you’re here, donkey…you can run, but you can’t hide.)

I’m pretty sure that if I had played this game at her age, I would’ve had the laser-like focus Kate had…..for about a minute.  (Look for the donkey…look for the donkey…look for the—oooh, ice cream!)

Right after Kate found the donkey, she was beaming. I looked down at her and thought: You got this skill from your mother. Both Kate and my wife are highly observant people. Me, not so much. I can’t count how many times my wife and I have had a conversation like this:

Me: “I really like this new lamp.”

Her: “I bought it six months ago.”

As I was driving home from the store, I was thinking about how much Kate is like her mom. Then suddenly I heard Kate’s voice from the back seat.

“Daddy?”

I turned down the radio.

“What sweetie?”

“Poo poo!” she said, followed by a huge belly laugh—which totally cracked me up.

I guess the kid is a little like me too.
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San Francisco Department of Public Health’s new ad campaign 02/18/2011
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A couple months ago, I got an email from someone at the San Francisco Department of Public Health. She asked if I was available to do some cartooning for an upcoming public health advertising campaign.

“The campaign is to promote the use of female condoms,” she wrote.

For several years, I did cartooning for the SF Health Department’s syphilis prevention campaign, which featured a happy-go-lucky cartoon penis named “Healthy Penis.” Those comic strip ads were fun to write and draw, so I was interested to find out what their new “female condom” campaign was all about.

I thought, Maybe they’ll want me to draw a talking female condom. She could be called Connie the Condom!

I emailed back saying that I was available and asked for more information. Turns out there wasn’t going to be any mascot for this campaign. They had something completely different in mind.

“We want to promote the use of the newly redesigned female condom (called FC2) among gay and bisexual men,” she said. “We’d like you to draw a series of illustrations which would show men how to use it.”

I was sent samples of illustrations showing women inserting the condom. They were plain and looked like typical textbook illustrations. She asked if I could create a new a series of cartoony illustrations of a man using the female condom. I was a little disappointed that there wasn’t going to be a goofy cartoon mascot involved, but was happy to accept the job.

Over the next few days, I worked on the sketches. The first drawing was a hand holding the condom. Pretty straightforward.

Then I started drawing the second sketch: a guy standing up, with his partner about to insert the condom.  My wife was there for instant feedback.

“It’s weird to see one of your cartoon characters with his pants around his ankles,” she said.

“Yeah,” I replied. "It's really weird."

 “What’s that behind his butt?”

“It’s his partner’s hand,” I said. “He’s about to insert the condom.”

“Don’t you think the hand should be a lot closer?”

“It’s close enough,” I said.

“His hand is like three feet behind the guy’s butt,” she said. “You have to make it much closer—he’s his sex partner.”

“You really think it’s too far away?”  

“The way you have it drawn now, it doesn’t look like he’s about to have sex with the guy. It looks like he’s going to throw the condom at him and run."

She was right. It looked ridiculous.

I went ahead corrected the sketch and proceeded to work on the others. One Saturday morning, my two-and-a-half-year-old daughter walked up next to me while I was drawing a tattoo on a naked butt.

“What’s that, Daddy?”

“It’s a tattoo,” I said, then quickly moved the drawing pad out of view. “Why don’t you go play with your toys?”

In about a week, the cartoons were finished and approved by the Health Department. Here’s an excerpt (censored for the kids):
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The campaign launched this past Monday, on Valentine’s day, at San Francisco’s Civic Center Plaza.  

I really enjoyed working with the Health Department. They’re great. Still, I wish I could’ve drawn a cartoon character named Connie the Condom. That would’ve been a lot of fun.
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Farewell to Jacques 02/04/2011
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In my day job I work in development for a large nonprofit company. My company manages seven housing facilities for seniors—from government-subsidized housing to upscale retirement communities. Another facet of the company is that we offer Community Service programs for low-income seniors in the Bay Area. I raise money for these programs.

Because my office is adjacent to one of our high-end retirement communities, I encounter seniors every day. Over the course of six years, I’ve met some wonderful and interesting older adults. Jacques Iselin was one of them.

Originally from Switzerland, Jacques had a thick accent and a no-nonsense demeanor. He walked around the retirement community like he owned the place. The atmosphere of a retirement home, I’ve learned, is just like high school. It has all the same elements—the “in crowd,” the rumor mill, the backstabbers, the misfits, the troublemakers—except that all the “kids” are in their 70s, 80s and 90s. Jacques Iselin was definitely one of the “cool kids.”

When I met Jacques in early 2005, my first impression, I have to admit, wasn’t a good one. I remember him barging into my office and telling me—not asking me, but telling me—to do something. I can’t recall the details of his request but I do remember thinking, “Who the hell IS this guy?”

Over the course of the next year or so, I began to "get” Jacques. Beneath the gruff exterior was a nice guy. And a great human being.

Although my personality is nothing like Jacques’, I still viewed him is kind of a role model. He lived life the way I believe it should be lived. He traveled extensively, was kind, stayed active, and generously gave back to his community with his time and money.  In the nonprofit senior services sector, two widely used buzz phrases are: “healthy aging” and “aging successfully.” Jacques was the embodiment of both those terms.  (As his wife Silvia would say to friends, “Jacques is so healthy, it’s sickening.”)

In early January, Jacques began experiencing some pain which worsened over the course of a couple weeks. As the pain became unbearable, he went to the doctor. During an examination at the hospital, it was discovered that Jacques had cancer. Everywhere. Jacques’ body was filled with tumors.

Upon giving Jacques this shocking news, the doctor said there were two options: 1. Undergo a rigorous chemotherapy treatment that would likely add months, possibly even years, to his life or 2. Do nothing, in which case he would have just weeks to live. Jacques chose Option 2.

When Jacques returned to the retirement community’s Health Center, he wrote a letter which Silvia placed on the main bulletin board for all residents to see.  It read:

“Dear friends,

You may have heard that I was in the hospital. The doctor discovered that I have cancer in several vital organs. Instead of enduring a painful and prolonged chemotherapy treatment, I have decided to leave this earth with dignity. I’ve had a great life. I’ve traveled the world and lived to a good old age. I have no regrets.

“I would love for you to visit me in the Health Center. My eyes may be closed when you come in but just say my name and I’ll be happy to talk with you.  I look forward to seeing you!”

Last Friday, January 28, I went up to the Health Center to visit Jacques. He was lying in his bed, looking very frail, and his eyes were indeed closed. Instantly I had flashbacks of visiting my father in the hospital eight years earlier.  My dad died of cancer in 2003 at the age of 63. I was surprised how quickly those memories came rushing back. I contemplated turning around. Instead I said, “Jacques?”

Jacques’ eyes immediately opened and he turned his head towards me. A weak smile came across his face and he began to sit up. It was clear he had lost a lot of weight. “Hey,” he said. “How are you?”

His well-known gruff exterior was gone. He was simply a dying man, at peace with his decision to leave this world. Thanks to the morphine, he was in no pain. He looked frail but he also looked extremely content.

We chatted briefly and I resisted the temptation to say “Goodbye.” Instead I told him, “We’re all thinking about you down there.” Before I headed out the door, I reached out my hand. Jacques grabbed it and squeezed it. “Take care,” he said.

Yesterday morning, February 3, I received an email from the retirement community next door. Whenever a resident passes away, we are notified. The email subject line was: “Death notice.” I knew who it was before I opened it.

Jacques Iselin passed away peacefully early in the morning on February 3. He was 87 years old.

Goodbye, Jacques. You lived your life well, with no regrets.

I hope to do the same.
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Bad cartoon ideas 01/03/2011
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For me, bad cartoon ideas fall into three categories:  

1. The Obviously Bad Idea – when I immediately realize how awful it is, seconds after sketching it out.  

2. The Bad Idea Disguised as a Good Idea – when I sketch something and like it a lot, but then later realize (usually after the caffeine wears off) that it’s totally lame.  

3. The Bad Idea That I Still Kind of Like – puns, offensive material and obvious, clichéd jokes fall into this category. These are the ideas that are essentially bad but there’s something about them that I can’t help but like.  

The other day I sketched something that fell squarely into Category 3. Initially I thought it was funny but later I had this nagging feeling that it wasn’t all that good. I was on the fence about it, so  I did what I usually do when I’m in doubt about a sketch: I showed it to my wife Katrina. (Here it is, in all its crappy glory)
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After reading it, Katrina looked up and locked her eyes on mine.  She was silent but her eyes said “Hell no.”  

“So…you don’t like it.” I said.  

“I hate jokes about women’s periods. HATE them.”  

“But see, they’re robots and she’s asking—”  

“I get it, but it's dumb. Sorry.”  

“Okay.”  

A few seconds of silence.  

“You shouldn’t do jokes about women’s periods,” she said. “Not a good idea.”  

I agree that, generally speaking, it’s a bad idea for guys to make jokes about women’s periods. But I see this more as relationship humor. You know, even robot husbands sometimes have to buy feminine products for their wives. They’re just like us!  

Is it funny now? No?  

Damn it.
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Second best gift wrapper in the world 12/22/2010
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Just saw this article on SFGate about the second-best gift wrapper in the world. She lives in San Francisco and her name is Megumi Inouye. I don’t really care about gift wrapping in general, mainly because I suck at it. I read the article only because I was intrigued by the fact Ms. Inouye is the second-best gift wrapper in the world.  Who knew there were gift wrapping competitions?

Turns out Ms. Inouye got the title “second-best gift wrapper in the world” at a big contest in New York in 2008. The article explained that she would have been the first-best gift wrapper in the world except that she made minor error in the final round of the competition. From the article:

“The challenge was to wrap a baby grand piano. Inouye might have been slightly ahead but, in her joy, she forgot to do what she usually does—to fold over one edge of the wrapping paper, for extra strength. When she pulled the paper over the piano keyboard, it suffered a small tear.”

I
remember in elementary school I got second place in a class spelling bee because I left out the ‘h’ in the word “rhyme.” For years, whenever I saw the word “rhyme” I thought about how close I came to greatness, but fell just short. 

I wonder what Ms. Inouye thinks whenever she sees a baby grand piano. “Damn it, I could’ve been somebody!”

Probably not. From the article, she seems like a person who wouldn’t get too worked up over losing a championship. It’s clear she has a passion for wrapping gifts that transcends competitions. Here’s her take on gift wrapping:

“Wrapping is self-expression. It is an extension of the gift. It is the soul of the giver communicating to the soul of the recipient.”


For people who are good gift wrappers, that’s a heartwarming thought. For me, not so much. It’s unsettling to think that every Christmas, over all these years, my soul has basically been telling other people's souls to go f--k themselves.

I’m glad wife does most of the gift wrapping.  
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