Is it a conscious decision to keep Amelia single? I personally think it’s great either way that she doesn’t fall into the whole, “If only I had a man…”funk some writers put their female characters in.

ameliacolecomic:

Now this is Adam answering and I am answering for me here, really so keep that in mind. THAT SAID: On my end it came from a place of “She doesn’t have TIME.” Just being realistic here. She’s a busy, busy woman holding down a really strange job and in a place that, while she is used to it, is still fairly new to her all told. Doesn’t mean she won’t eventually have a relationship (And wait a second! Who says it would be with a man? Or with a human? Or with any specific gender over any other? We’ve never had her in a relationship so we haven’t mentioned her preferences in that area yet. Hell, she may be asexual. Perfectly fine thing to be. We’re not telling as of now.) but if she is ever in a place to have a relationship it is something I feel we would discuss amongst ourselves a good long time before pulling the trigger on so that we could do it justice and with all the care we put into everything about Amelia.

TL;DR – Yeah – she’s kinda in a war right now, bad time to go out on dates.

I don’t know what it says about me that I have never even once thought “I wonder why Amelia doesn’t have a boy- or girlfriend” during the… two years, I guess, of me reading the series.

I feel like to be effective with the reader you need to surprise them with the formalism. You need to give them what they’re expecting and then gently introduce something that’s different, and then you can gradually blow their mind, (laughs) instead of just tossing a bunch of mysterious lines at the reader or whatever. I’ll always give the artist the benefit of the doubt that there’s probably something smart going on, but if I don’t know what’s going on, then, for me, it’s not successful, it’s not inspiring. But I don’t think it was right to call that “empty.” I am interested in a lot of formalist work. I could easily see myself making even weirder, unreadable comics, and I guess I’ve dabbled in that, but I’m really afraid of going too far down that road. I’m sure we would both get lost. For some cartoonists that’s what they want to do and I don’t think there’s anything wrong with it. Also, once I finally understand what they’re actually doing I’m usually like, “oh this is pretty brilliant.”

Yes, that’s right: one of the characters from Detroit is called Chevy. Another is called “Baseball,” because—well, I don’t know. It’s American? Or he’d watched The Wire and noticed that one of the characters was called Bubbles and thought maybe it was something similar? It’s not important, because Mark Millar is telling you how bad things are in the city, y’all. Like, he’s literally telling you, with characters offering laughably heavy exposition that not only doesn’t read like anything any real person would ever say, but of course makes the characters sound like every other character Mark Millar has written regardless of culture, location or any other factor that could possibly differentiate them.

Cheap Superhero Adventures In Other People’s Misery: Mark Millar’s MPH | Wait, What?

@graemem reviews Millar’s MPH. Go read the whole thing.

(via bigredrobot)

Dylan manages to link to my MPH review before I do, because I suck and he doesn’t.

We Created Moose Kid Comics For Three Main Reasons:

To entertain comic readers and win new audiences.
To show how fantastic a children’s comic can be when artists create it themselves.
To open up the discussion about how we can make children’s comics great again.

Here in the U.K, mainstream children’s comics have been dying out, especially ones featuring original content. The Phoenix and The Beano are the only commercially available weekly titles still producing entirely original characters, but they are competing against big-name licensed titles based on TV shows or merchandising.

We want to help change things. We want to be creating the next generation of loveable characters for the world to embrace, all created by artists who retain their copyrights and put all their heart into their creations.

We want to remind both children and adults alike how fantastical and imaginative comics can be, and to help bring children’s comics back into the public consciousness.

Thirty-six page first issue available for download right here. Go, support this.

“Bowie Has Saved More Lives Than Batman”: An Interview with the Creators of The Wicked + the Divine

“Bowie Has Saved More Lives Than Batman”: An Interview with the Creators of The Wicked + the Divine