March To-Do List
Get out your calendar and start circling dates. It’s time to do a little webcomics planning.The content you are trying to access is only available to members.
Get out your calendar and start circling dates. It’s time to do a little webcomics planning.The content you are trying to access is only available to members.
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This is a re-post from the Webcomics.com archive. If you’ve ever been curious about the kind of information, tutorials and advice that you’ll get as part of your subscription to Webcomics.com, this is a good example.
If you’d like to join the site, you can get a 12-month subscription for $30 — or you can get a one-month Trial for $5 … with no obligation after your 30 days expire. For less than three bucks a month, you can get a steady flow of information, tutorials and advice targeted towards your webcomic business — plus a private forum to discuss issues with other professionally minded cartoonists.
I like writing about the writing process — especially humor writing. It’s a topic that I find many people who write cartooning tutorials shy away from because it’s so difficult to quantify. But it’s something that’s essential to what we do. So even though I know I’ll never be able to write a step-by-step guide to writing the perfect joke, I like sharing little moments in which I think I’ve gotten a greater understanding of the process.
While teaching my Sequential Art class at Hussian School of Art, I had exactly that kind of moment.
We had gotten through the midterm-project critiques more quickly than I’d anticipated, and I had class time remaining. And I hate wasting those few hours we get together every week. So, I decided to spend a little time doing some writing exercises that I had planned for an earlier class (but never got to).
The first exercise was relatively straightforward. They each received one character type (clown, spy, child, hero, cowboy, maid, etc.) and one setting (moon, airport, DMV, coffeeshop). Their assignment was to write something funny that combined those two elements.
Although many of them found the Clever. Few of them found the Funny. All of them felt overwhelmed.
So we moved on to a second exercise. The were told to map out four panels. Then, they were told to start the first panel with a character and a sentence — nothing more.
Once they’d finished, I had everybody pass their paper to the person on their left. Now the instructions were to simply build on the first panel. Find the drama. Build the tension. Expand on the idea.
Once that second panel was completed, the pages got passed to the left again. Each student was now presented with a fresh two-panel set-up. The goal was simple: Keep building the tension and try to leave a clear path to a fourth-panel punchline. If they did their jobs well, the next person should be able to bring that fourth panel home with an easy slam dunk.
The results were funny. Very funny. Way funnier than the results of the first exercise. The resulting critique was punctuated by giggles, laughter — and suggestions for improvements, follow-ups and stinger gags*.
What was the difference between the first exercise and the second one?
In the first assignment, the students were thrown two random elements and were put in the awkward position of finding something that connected the two. Hopefully that connection could be exploited in a humorous way.
It’s not a bad way to get the creative juices flowing — and it’s a decent writing prompt for single-panel comics. But it relies on some humor-writing chops that some of my students were still developing.
The second project, however, was different. Instead of trying to make lightning strike, the students focused on the basic craft of a comic strip:
Introduction -> set-up -> build tension -> punchline.
And, when they were simply focused on doing each step to the best of their abilities — instead of trying to be funny in the first step — the very process…
Introduction -> set-up -> build tension -> punchline.
… often brought them to a place from which they could easily identify a punchline.
Moreover, this approach could be coupled with a brainstorming technique (like Cascading Brainstorming) into your writing routine to help find the Funny more consistently. In other words, instead of doggedly following a single set-up to a single build-tension to a single punchline, a writer might experiment with several set-ups. And then, one could follow those set-ups to alternate build-tension moments (and several subsequent punchlines). Better yet, the development can happen in all directions. A good set-up might suggest an improvement on the introduction. And the way those two panels work together might suggest a path to a punchline that is a huge improvement over the initial glimmer of a joke.
And why? Because it’s hard to be funny. Sometimes it’s beneficial to break the process down to its elements and simply concentrate on doing each step to the best of your ability. My students found that focusing on the structure of setting up a joke took them to a place from which they could write better punchlines.
If you struggle with writing humor — or if you’re feeling brainlocked and need something to kickstart your creativity — maybe this is an approach that could be beneficial to you as well. If you do experiment with it, please report back and share your experiences!
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* Little punchlines that follow the main punchline that serve to deepen the humor.
Today’s post is the first of the One The Spot series of Hot Seat critiques. The concept is simple: Your ability to gain new readers is a direct function of your ability to retain the first-time reader who is coming to your site today. (For a more elaborate explanation of this concept, read the “How Do I Get More Readers?” pice from a short time ago.) Today’s participant is Kev’s Tees.
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As reported here last week, crowdfunding mega-player Patreon has added an incredibly useful dashboard for creators. This expanded feature gives creators crucial stats on payments, patrons and engagement. And the improvements just keep coming! Recently, Patreon has included reporting on a feature that has earned it an A-rating from Webcomics.com’s review of third-party providers in this regard…
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Here’s a quick pro-tip on running house ads in Google DFP that will help you optimize your ad revenue.
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This is an open call for an “One The Spot” Hot Seat critique. Here’s how it works, if you sign up, I will go to your site on a random day and talk about the site on that day. No archive dives. No “you had to read yesterday’s comic to understand today’s.” We talk about your comic and Web site from the standpoint of the newcomer who just arrived on that day. Was your work strong enough to retain that newcomer — and possibly convert him or her to a reader? Or did you lose your opportunity?
During the recent Webcomics.com Poll, 27% of the respondents said their top worry for 2016 was increasing their readership. To that, I offer you a magic wand that will do exactly that. Can you wield the wand? That’s what this critique is all about.
To participate, include the following information in the Comments below:
The question on the new Webcomics.com poll is simple: Do you think ad blockers have had a negative effect on your business?
Answer below.
The results of the most recent Webcomics.com poll are in, and it seems that most of us are most worried about money, readers and time. Here are the breakdowns, and a few thoughts:
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Part of the new dashboard that Patreon has rolled out is the Exit Interview. When a patron discontinues his or her pledge, they are offered an exit interview. This gives them a chance to explain why they’re leaving.
I’ve found this to be the classic good news / bad news situation. Here’s why:
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