Bizarro is brought to you today by Save The Date.
This is my first post of the new year, 2011, unless you count the two posts I did on January 2nd, which could technically qualify as posts in the new year if you want to get all literal about it. One of those, entitled "Plans for 2011" was one of my better efforts, I think, so if you haven't read that yet, please do. I hope, with all humility, that it makes you smile. Or at least twitch in a positive way, no worse off than you were before you began.
Today's offerings are lessons for us all in the new year. In the first cartoon, we see a gentlemen mistaking a dog which has been trained to assist the disabled for a common waiter. Shame on him. The day after this cartoon appeared in papers, I received an email from a person whose living is assisted by a service dog, wishing to place shame on me for drawing this cartoon. Let this be a lesson to us all in the new year: never do anything that might be misinterpreted by anyone on earth.
Our next cartoon is about smart rodents and smart phones. Because of the size relationship between the two, a mouse or rat could use a smart phone as a big screen TV. Like the one your brother-in-law has so he can watch those crappy reality shows he and his ugly wife are hooked on. Like you really need to see Kim Kardashian's butt LARGER than actual size. But our clever little rats have chosen a classic Mickey Mouse cartoon. Good for them. Let this be a lesson to us all: I hate the fact that I even know who Kim Kardashian is. What is wrong with America?
This doctor cartoon is silly. It is a play off the expression, "Money doesn't grow on trees." If you are reading this and saying to yourself, "I have never heard this term, wtf does it mean?" you are likely from another country. That's fine, we like foreign readers here at Bizarro Headquarters. The term is used for situations in which a person is wasting something. If your stupid brother-in-law with the ugly wife buys a new pair of shoes every week and throws the old ones in the trash, his wife might say, "Hey, Rick. Money doesn't grow on trees." Let this be a lesson to us all: Don't say this to your husband if he is a foreigner.
If you would like to see the cartoon I published on New Year's Eve, just look to your left right now. I have used a bit of an Escher-like trick here in turning the pub sideways, to indicate that the gentleman on the street has had too much to drink. Like all teenagers (and anyone of any age who enjoys marijuana), I really love M.C. Escher's work. I have done a number of cartoons based on him and have found that while publishing a cartoon about Escher is considered legal satire, the Escher family is really tight-fisted about letting you use them for anything else. Like if you put one on a T-shirt for sale, they'll sue you.
This last cartoon is one I did in 1997, which I believe would make M.C. himself twitch appreciatively. But don't expect to get it on a T-shirt. The Escher family doesn't want to share even a few hundred of the millions of dollars they have made on their relative's talent. Let this be a lesson to us all: Be born with a talented relative who will leave you his estate so you never have to do any work other than stopping other people from using their talents to comment on him.
That's all the lessons for today. I hope your 2011 is full of rapturous and indescribable joy and prosperity the likes of which no mere mortal has every experienced and lived to tell the tale.
And don't forget to save the date, of course. You'd hate to be out of town at some boring seminar for work on a day like this.
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Thursday, 6 January 2011
Stats Week: Amazon Top 50 for 2010
Here are the top 50 comics from the weekly Amazon Top 50 posts of 2010:
Methodology: I took my weekly (compiled on Friday) lists of Amazon Top 50 Comics & Graphic Novels, and for each week assigned a comic a numerical score equal to 51 minus its ranking; e.g. the #1 book got 50 points, the #2 book got 49 points, the #3 book got 48 points, etc., all the way down to the #50 book getting 1 point. I poured everything into a spreadsheet, and voila. There were a total of 345 different comics that made the Top 50 for at least one week during 2010. You can download a spreadsheet with all of the data here.
Several comics mysteriously dropped out of the Amazon Comics & Graphic Novels Comics & Graphic Novels Bestsellers lists at different points during the year, notably certain volumes of Diary of a Wimpy Kid and Scott Pilgrim, due to Amazon for some reason re-classifying them to not be comics. What to do? I could have tried to use overall sales ranking to try to intuit their comics chart ranking for those I knew about, but that would only work if I knew it was missing from the chart, which couldn't possibly be the case for everything. In the end in the interest of fairness I decided to take everything at face value and only give it a ranking for the week if it appeared on the comics chart.
I'll be back either tomorrow or this weekend with more analysis and a bunch of (hopefully interesting) charts.
- Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Dog Days
- Diary of a Wimpy Kid: The Ugly Truth
- Scott Pilgrim, vol. 1: Scott Pilgrim's Precious Little Life
- Scott Pilgrim, vol. 2: Scott Pilgrim Versus The World
- Scott Pilgrim, vol. 6: Scott Pilgrim's Finest Hour
- Scott Pilgrim, vol. 3: Scott Pilgrim and the Infinite Sadness
- Kick-Ass
- Maus I: A Survivor's Tale: My Father Bleeds History
- The Walking Dead Compendium Volume 1
- The Book of Genesis Illustrated by R. Crumb
- Watchmen
- Twilight: The Graphic Novel, Volume 1
- Batman: The Dark Knight Returns
- The Walking Dead, vol. 11: Fear the Hunters
- Persepolis: The Story of a Childhood
- Scott Pilgrim, vol. 4: Scott Pilgrim Gets It Together
- The Walking Dead, vol. 12
- Buffy the Vampire Slayer Season Eight, vol. 6: Retreat
- Understanding Comics: The Invisible Art
- The Complete Calvin and Hobbes
- Troublemaker Book 1: Alex Barnaby Series 3
- Diary of a Wimpy Kid: The Last Straw
- The Walking Dead Book 5
- Batman: The Killing Joke
- V for Vendetta
- Odd Is On Our Side
- Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Roderick Rules
- Diary of a Wimpy Kid
- Maus II: A Survivor's Tale: And Here My Troubles Began
- Diary of a Wimpy Kid Box of Books
- Serenity: The Shepherd's Tale
- Dork Diaries 2: Tales from a Not-So-Popular Party Girl
- Blackest Night
- Dark Tower: The Fall of Gilead
- The Adventures of Ook and Gluk, Kung-Fu Cavemen from the Future
- Buffy the Vampire Slayer Season Eight, vol. 7: Twilight
- Logicomix: An Epic Search for Truth
- Batman: Year One
- The Walking Dead, vol. 13
- Green Lantern: Blackest Night
- Superman: Earth One
- Fun Home: A Family Tragicomic
- The Walking Dead Book 6
- Dilbert: 2011 Day-to-Day Calendar
- Instructions
- Scott Pilgrim, vol. 5: Scott Pilgrim vs. The Universe
- Fables Vol. 13: The Great Fables Crossover
- 40: A Doonesbury Retrospective
- Dork Diaries: Tales from a Not-So-Fabulous Life
- Big Nate: From the Top
Methodology: I took my weekly (compiled on Friday) lists of Amazon Top 50 Comics & Graphic Novels, and for each week assigned a comic a numerical score equal to 51 minus its ranking; e.g. the #1 book got 50 points, the #2 book got 49 points, the #3 book got 48 points, etc., all the way down to the #50 book getting 1 point. I poured everything into a spreadsheet, and voila. There were a total of 345 different comics that made the Top 50 for at least one week during 2010. You can download a spreadsheet with all of the data here.
Several comics mysteriously dropped out of the Amazon Comics & Graphic Novels Comics & Graphic Novels Bestsellers lists at different points during the year, notably certain volumes of Diary of a Wimpy Kid and Scott Pilgrim, due to Amazon for some reason re-classifying them to not be comics. What to do? I could have tried to use overall sales ranking to try to intuit their comics chart ranking for those I knew about, but that would only work if I knew it was missing from the chart, which couldn't possibly be the case for everything. In the end in the interest of fairness I decided to take everything at face value and only give it a ranking for the week if it appeared on the comics chart.
I'll be back either tomorrow or this weekend with more analysis and a bunch of (hopefully interesting) charts.
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