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Frequently Asked Questions

Q: Hey, aren't you ripping off "Red Meat?"

A: I'm a huge fan of Max Cannon's strip Red Meat. The guy is twice a genius: once for his wickedly funny and perverse writing and once for having pioneered a whole new technique in the once-thought-fossilized medium of the comic strip. The original version of PartiallyClips, "Cel Block" which ran in Scene magazine in 1998, was definitely inspired by Red Meat.

Having said that, there are some major distinctions between PartiallyClips and Red Meat. First and most importantly, PartiallyClips has no recurring characters. Every fan of Red Meat knows Milkman Dan and Johnny Lemonhead and Bug-Eyed Earl, but the characters you see in a PartiallyClips strip will never be seen outside those three frames.

Second, Max Cannon actually does change the expression, position, and other aspects of the art within one of his strips. PartiallyClips will always have three identical, static panels.

Third, PartiallyClips doesn't have taglines, which are one of the best reasons to read Red Meat. ("Trilobite Tracks on your Teleological Treatise"?! Brilliance!) Unfortunately, I'm not the poet that Mr. Cannon is. And again, I'm not out to rip him off, but to explore some of the ground he has opened up.

Finally, while both strips use dark and twisted themes for humor, there is a distinct difference in style. Most of my gags would seem wrong in a Red Meat strip, and vice versa. I believe that there is room in the world for a PartiallyClips and a Red Meat, even if our fan base may overlap. The Web is large; it contains multitudes.

Q: Hey, aren't you ripping off "Get Your War On?"

Here, I have an even better answer. I had done at least 30 strips before I ever saw Get Your War On, David Rees' great clip-art political strip, and it should be obvious that he's doing something totally different, weird and special over there. Look, there's a lot of room left in this medium. Strips that use clip art are pretty much all about the writing, and we're all doing our own thing for our own reasons. Go pick on the thousands of strips which suck because their creator can draw but can't write.

Q: Where do you get the clip art?

A: I have a 29-CD set of clip art from Nova Development. It contains 600,000 images. I scan through the CDs, looking at the images for likely candidates, and save these to a folder. I try to pick ones with multiple people, because most of the best strips I have done use dialog. I have identified close to a thousand images.

Q: Are you worried about copyrights on the images or having to pay royalties? Won't you get sued?

A: Commercially-sold clip art is royalty free. Generally, the only thing you can't do with it is sell it in another collection of clip art. The end user agreement for my clip art mentions that it may not be used in obscene or libelous ways. Both terms have specific legal definitions (which PartiallyClips will never do anything to fit), and they are there to protect Nova Development from being sued.

Q: How do you write a strip?

A: I look through my candidate images until one strikes me as funny or I get the nucleus of an idea. I import that image into a 3-column template in MS Word 2000. I print out the blank template and commune with it, writing dialog snippets and margin notes all over the page. It it's a tough one to write, I will take out a notepad and fill pages just asking myself questions about the characters, their situation, their personal history with each other, etc.

Eventually I have the dialog all written and I lay it out in balloons in Paint Shop Pro 7, using a cleaner-looking background I made in Photoshop. Then I print it, decide if it's funny, try rewrites of clunky dialog, make small tweaks on the layout, then save it in about 5 different file formats for different purposes.

Q: Do you ever get an idea and then go looking for a clip that fits it?

A: I used to claim it was impossible to do it this way. That was when I had a smaller set of clip art which did not come with a print directory. Now I have 600,000 images an a phonebook sized gallery of thumbnails. Every once in a while I think I can turn something I said in conversation into a strip, and I go looking for likely clips. This has even worked a few times, but it's still very difficult.

Q: You should do a strip about...

A: Well, the thing is, I'm not really open to ideas from readers. There is the possibility of being sued if I use your idea, sure. But really it's the fact that PClips is my project, my baby, and my means of expression. I'm not that interested in sharing it, except with other comics creators whose work I admire in the form of a guest week or something. And even if I wanted to, I've explained above that it's very hard to work from the idea alone. These strips start with the art I borrow, and the humor is generated from that.

Q: Do you ever try a clip and can't make a strip out of it?

A: Yes. I have some strips that took 3 or 4 days and a dozen pages of notes to get done. On several occasions I have completely given up on a clip after weeks of it nagging at me. I plan to have a contest at some point for readers to take a stab at writing strips for these clips.

Q: Do you do this for a living?

A: Yes? Sort of? As of this writing (Aug 2003) I have quit all forms of paycheck-oriented activity and I am working full time on producing and growing PartiallyClips. This has meant a major lifestyle change but it will allow me to do things to make this project succeed which I otherwise would not have time to do.

Q: Why are you doing this?

A: I have this weird need to entertain.

I'd like to write serious hard-SF novels, but few serious things I've written have given me the positive feedback that I've gotten from writing humor. I stumbled into inventing this very narrow medium of expression, and it seems to work for me, so I am sticking with it and we'll see how far it goes.

The plan had been to make money until my mid-40s, get financially comfortable, then try and start a writing career. In 2001, a high school friend of mine named Dan Fahs died. He was 32. He was my age. He was an amazing illustrator and the two of us had tried to get a comic strip called "Belchburger" published in 1991. Dan's death reminded me that nothing is certain, and if I want to leave any kind of creative legacy I might not have the luxury of waiting until my 40s to start it. So here is PartiallyClips.

Q: How long have you been doing the strip?

A: Cel Block (same format) I did for Scene magazine in 1998. There were exactly two whole strips. In December 2001 I started writing PartiallyClips. First content appeared on the website in February 2002.

Q: Who came up with the name "PartiallyClips?"

A: When I decided to revive Cel Block, I found that www.celblock.com was registered. I put it to the Nth Degree staffers to help me find a new name. Cate Twohill came up with "Totally Clips," which I thought was excellent. The problem was that it too was registered as a domain, and was also the name of 50 hair salons around the continent. I modified it to PartiallyClips and snapped up the domain. You could argue that PartiallyClips is more appropriate than Totally Clips anyway, since the strips are partially clip art and partially my dialog.

Q: What are your plans for syndication?

A: I identified a list of alternative weekly papers. In September 2002 I sent out a mass-mailing of full syndication packages to 135 publications. Each package contained 50 camera-ready strips, and my permission to print PartiallyClips for FREE through May 2003, along with a terms-of-use agreement (minor legal stuff). In spending the money to do this, I hoped to jump-start the strip and save a couple of years on the readership-building process. It has worked, and several papers are now running the strip. A list of papers that are currently running the strip can be found on the main page.

In May of 2003 I began to charge a syndication fee. I will remain self-syndicated for as far as I can forsee. I hate the way the major syndicates do business and it'd have to be a pantsload of money to make me sign with one.

Q: Is there any subject you won't write a strip about?

A: Lots of em. Most of them I won't talk about, either. Mainly I am avoiding political humor and anything topical that would date the strip. I don't mind offending some readers but the balrog of political correctness does pursue me through the mines. It's an annoying coincidence that PartiallyClips abbreviates to PC.

Q: I don't get the one about...

A: Fugeddabahdit. Nobody I've shown these to has laughed at every strip. Go on and read the next one.

Q: Do you sell the originals?

A: Duh, there are no originals. It's a shame, too. I'd sell my toenail clippings if I thought there was a market. I have started saving my notes pages though.

Q: Anything I can do to help the strip?

A: You can certainly donate money to support the upkeep of the site and to show your appreciation for the free laughs. You can also Vote for the strip every day by clicking the VOTE button on the header. Tell your friends about Nth Degree and PartiallyClips, and email them links to this site. In general, I want everyone in the world to read more often, think critically, and pay attention.

 
     


     
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