How did the blandly inexpressive, vacantly infantile modern style become so widespread?
Does it have to do with our broader modern culture emphasizing cooperation over competition, conformity over ambition?
Consider the sociological effect of Tumblr on young cartoonists…🧵
Young cartoonists on Tumblr exist in a virtual community of 1000s of other cartoonists. Many of them watch/read a wide visual variety of cartoons & comics - so why do they only draw like their friends?
Is this a simple socialization effect?
Or is it over-socialization?
Young cartoonists learning to draw online begin to see drawing as a non-confrontational, social interaction, a means of fitting into a group.
Overtly expressive, "out there" art is seen as too aggressive.
Competition becomes based around whose art is the most friendly & squishy
In an "online community" the incentive is to get along - not to stand out.
Complex character designs, difficult dimensional angles, even highly exaggerated poses & animation becomes "showing off" or "tryhard"
& no longer just Having Fun Making Cartoons With Your Friends Online
I've heard that Tumblr cartoonists have gotten more into 90s/2000s "in-your-face" aesthetics lately. Maybe, but if they get into the industry?
Cal Arts actually does require good technical skills to enter, but modern animation requires them to draw way below their skill level
The most striking thing about the online cartooning community, to people who aren't acclimated to it, is that past a certain point, there isn't much difference between the "amateur" level you see on Tumblr & what you see on actual pro-level Hollywood TV productions
The modern softboi style trickled up from Tumblr into the industry just like other online movements invaded the mainstream- "Shucks Im just a smol lil scribbly cartoon doodler fella"
It's not about striving for excellence but being part of a "community" - even at the pro level!
The anime / western cartoon fan schism exists partly because anime fans see the animators & artists still have some sense of healthy competition to outdo each other whereas in Hollywood if you create something exceptional the “animation community” just kind of politely ignores it
The planted axiom in "the online cartooning community" is everyone has their own "style" - but if you point out that many of them seem to be the same, well - they know that, they just think it's good there’s a popular, easy style. That's "inclusive"
Nobody has to feel inadequate
In sum, I think Tumblr socialized a generation of cartoonists to draw "cute" (bland) & "chill" (stiff) so no-one in "the community" (pros & amateurs merged online) would have hurt feelings
A social construct of false naiveté about skills, to passive-aggressively hide competition
"Every era has it's own look, The industry never really changes, Nobody's art is any better than anyone else's, past or present, it's just a matter of taste"- This is the imposter snydrome of cartoonists who know how interchangeable / disposable the modern style has made them
Anyways, I take back everything I just said, drawing's really hard so every cartoon that gets made is like a precious little miracle to be celebrated. Remember to contribute to the Boxtown Kickstarter & help support independent animation artists who are following their dreams /🧵
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Fantagraphics & Georgetown Records Birthday trip report (this is an old pic, the weather sucked) 🧵
First of all, in a nice bit of synchronicity I've just gotten into The Roches & was going to check for Roches records at Georgetown & whaddya know, they were playing this album when I got there! (did not buy though)
This was the first record I found. Homer & Jethro were a kind of hillbilly musical comedy act from the 1940s-60s
It seems like a cost-efficient way to create quality "adult animation" in America would be for talented animators like this guy to just be let loose with clips from popular podcasters - of course YouTubers have allowed this for years, but I think only "The Ricky Gervais Show" has tried to do it for broadcast TV - it eliminates the expenses of the writing/development process, much like Reality TV did - but this would be for a good cause, because it would be an alternative to hack cartoon writers coming up with the umpteenth Adult Cartoon Sitcom. The biggest problem, though, is that popular podcasters need to have the good taste to want the animation to be more expressive than Family Guy (which to them might be more "professional" looking) - to check their egos & trust the animation won't "overshadow" them. I think the latter is the biggest reason why animated series created by comedians, like "F For Family," have really stiff art & animation - whereas you can imagine some talented animator having a lot of fun with Bill Burr clips if they were just allowed to go nuts. "The Ricky Gervais Show" had a similar problem - you can tell he wanted it to look "cartoony" but the animation direction was still really conservative; just a bunch of pre-approved expressions, nothing "off-model," no creativity.
Sven Stoffels' Chip Chipperson Podacast clips are good example of doing this concept justice - it's limited animation but hey, look at that - limited animation doesn't have to mean bland drawings
These are Joe Rogan's officially sanctioned animation clips from the JRE podcast - you can see the problem. Even when it's just one guy at the top, & not a committee of TV execs, that one person still needs to have good taste
In the future, more American animation will inhabit an uncanny valley where producers want their final product to look like both anime (because that's hip) & Disney (because that's "quality") without understanding the visual appeal of either
There have already been rumblings of this over the years of course
The optimal fusion of Japanese & American cartoon art styles already happened. It's not going to look this good again because American cartoon art doesn't have a distinct identity worth fusing anymore, at least not for action animation
Some of you guys are following this nut - sorry, but this is the only real filter anymore, because if you started buying into this ten years ago, & you weren't some impressionable teen but an actual grown adult already? You'll believe anything, & you probably have since then
"Hehe, Michigan knows that word" = "I grew up in the Midwest & it was still the 1970s when I realized I liked other boys. Letting BLM burn down your cities gives me some small measure of revenge"
Seriously what other explanation is there for this indulgence in casual homophobia from Mr. LGBTQ rights ally. He knows everyone on social media is calling him gay, so he's trying to deflect it back by using "gay" as a pejorative? How is that any less morally schizophrenic?
If they’re a good artist, I’ll keep following a cartoonist on here even after they tro0n out, but I gotta draw the line when they start drawing themselves as their new gender, it’s just too sad. Have to suspect there’s few cartroonists who don’t draw themselves afterwards, either
Getting some predictable replies for this one. It’s like John k respecter days all over again
Sorry it'll be 2025 soon & we're not humoring the psyop anymore which happened to go nationwide right after gay marriage was passed a decade ago & the leftist industrial complex realized they needed a new cause & found one to spiritually castrate young white males, including kids