Thursday, January 27, 2011

Getting Ideas: Bill Amend (FoxTrot)


Q: Where do you get your ideas?

“I think really, really, really hard. Seriously, there's no secret magic formula that I know of. It helps to have good characters to work with and to write about things I'm interested in, certainly. And the always looming do-or-die deadlines seem to help me, inexplicably.” [1]

Q: How have you been able to come up with so many ideas for so long?

There is a moment in just about every week where I stare at my blank piece of paper and think that the well has at last run dry and it's all over for me. And then somehow through a mix of panic and caffeine I get seven decent ideas out and live to see another week. I think what helps me most is through luck and design, I've put together a cast of characters that lets me cover a very wide range of subjects. So I can write computer jokes and golf jokes and academic jokes, etc., and having that sort of range gives me a lot of options when ideas seem scarce.” [2]

Q: What gives you ideas for Fox Trot, your family, or your Siblings?

“Most of the stuff in the strip is made up, but there are certainly influences from my own experiences both as a kid growing up and now as a husband/father.” [2]

Q: How do you go about producing ideas?

A: I drink a lot of coffee and hope that my brain vibrates enough that ideas will pop out. Seriously, I just try to be observant – the world’s full of humor – little nuggets of funny situations wherever you go, and this is particularly true when you’re doing a family strip. I suppose that for about 50% of the strips I depend on some sort of blurred memory of my family – things that happened, recollections of how I felt at different times, and so on. [3]

Q: What’s your writing routine like?

A: I start out with a clean yellow legal pad and begin scribbling down a 2-or-3 word description of some idea that may work, such as the birthday of one of the characters, back-to-school, or a family vacation. I may do a dozen of these in 10 minutes, and they get the brain wheels going along the line of an isolated strip, or of a whole week of strips on the same subject. I then write my dialogue, without any pictures, and the results almost look like a movie script. Previously I have Xeroxed sheets with the outlines of the 4 panels indicated. I write the dialogue in each panel, make rough sketches of the characters involved in each one. [3]

[1] Bill Amend’s FAQ Page
http://homepage.mac.com/billamend/faq.html

[2] Washington Post: Meet the Artist with Bill Amend
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/liveonline/03/regular/style/comics/r_style_comics021403.htm

[3] 1989 Interview with FoxTrot’s Bill Amend.
http://bakertoons.blogspot.com/2010/02/early-foxtrot-interview.html

Sunday, January 23, 2011

I have came up with two characters Bill and Zoomaro. Bill likes to play baseball and football. He has interesting opinions about African countries. Bill is kind of mean.
Zoomaro is a Kenyan foreign exchange student. He is really fast but wants to be faster in Kenya you have to be the fastest to get the water and food. Bill is teaching Zoomaro how more American. Zoomaro has a lot of trouble learning though.

Saturday, January 22, 2011

Hey Comic Strip Class,

I am working on several different characters for a couple of different scenarios. First I have Tyler and Tate; two best friend next door neighbors around 7 yrs. old. They are highly inspired by Indiana Jones, Bear Grylls, and Scooby Doo. They have a lot of difficulties determining between making good decisions and having a good adventure (for example, if Bear Grylls can eat raw grasshoppers, they must be delicious if they are roasted over a small backyard fire). If people didn't know them, they would think they were twins because they seem to share one brain. Anything can happen with a little imagination and a farmers field behind their houses where adventure lies behind every turn. When the field is planted in potatoes, there must be a potato monster lurking about. When there is wheat or hay, similar monsters will exist. It's just plain logic.

The other characters are based off of people I have met that seemed to share similar interests. There are three guys (not sure what ages yet) that room in one of the guy's mother's basement. They have spray painted the windows black and call the basement "The Bat Cave". Thinking of Rush, Leonard, and Seth for their names. They all like Star Wars way too much and they know their local gaming/computer store guys by name. They highly respect every member of the geek squad from Best Buy and hope to achieve such great success some day. Rush fixes computers and mumbles a lot. He laughs at peoples inability to understand complex computer problems because he can take them apart and put them back together with his eyes closed. Leonard drives truck making local deliveries. It is his mothers basement that the three live in. He considers himself quite the ladies man, but he cant really speak to them without getting sick. Seth knows everything about anything useless. His heroes are Rush and Leonard. This is what I am thinking so far.

Jared

A Copy of our CCC


Here is a copy of our Character Creating Card to help you with this week's homework. Be sure to post your 2-3 character descriptions on the blog as soon as you finish!

J.Clark

[right click and go to "save image as"]

Wednesday, January 19, 2011

Hello my fellow friends!



I am excited for us to share our work on this blog! It will help us give each other constructive feedback on our journeys to comic greatness! If you need help posting on the blog, please let me know by emailing me or calling me (use the contact information on your syllabus!

J.Clark