Friday, January 31, 2014
The Month's End
More Drugs For Justin and God Take Pity on His Soul…
Thursday, January 30, 2014
Blog Outage
Alex Salmond: Bin Dipper?
For good or for bad, last night's cartoon. It was one of those nights when two of the day's news stories seem to demand to be conflated. One was the story that the CPS are no longer going to prosecute people 'stealing' (I think it's more like recycling) discarded food from the bins behind an Iceland store. The other was the whole problem of what happens to Scotland's currency if they get independence. Steve Bell deals with the latter in today's Guardian. My drawing is the 30th caricature of my big month of caricature drawing and it's the first I've done in a long time where I've attempted to use colour. Wednesday, January 29, 2014
A Society of Manners?
The Daily Caricature
Tuesday, January 28, 2014
1400 Pounds
Like millions of people, part of the crap I've had to endure this week was submitting my self-assessment tax form. It's always a sobering thing to do: weighing up how little you've earned from all your labours. So when something like this appears, it's quite natural for your sphincter to give an involuntary contraction and your heart to leap up one nostril. Sadly, it didn't take me long to spot that it might not be a totally legit email. I have to say that whilst I admire the effort these spammers go to make their work look like the real deal, complete with all the official graphics, I'm pretty sure that Her Majesty's Revenue & Customs know the difference between pounds weight and pounds money, and they don't generally go issuing tax refunds in 'lbs'. My refund is apparently 1400lbs but of what, I'm not entirely sure, though I have my suspicions. Lemon Water
However, it at least allows me to deal with other things. I'm rushing late, as usual, to provide a cartoon for the next issue of Red All Over The Land (last night's caricature is an unfinished panel from that strip) and I've also written something for The Pangolin, which needs to be proofread. Before I do any of that, I really need to finish yesterday's discussion about viscous dogs. I suspected that chief ninja Elberry would know what to do with a devil dog and he emailed late last night to inform me that he has been handling attack hounds all his life. He doesn't go into much detail about jujitsu choke holds but he at least offered some suggestions about the proper equipment: As for weaponry, i would advise pepper spray - i wouldn't try and use an expandable baton (i had one in Manchester, for chavs) as dogs are more or less impervious to blows when they're fully charged, which is why you have to take them out immediately. […] If you really dislike dogs and they are a danger, i would get a small water pistol, fill it with water or lemon juice, and carry it somewhere you can draw it quickly. Dogs really don't like being sprayed. Tape the handle and leaking areas with gaffer tape to stop it spilling on you, like Michael Corleone's gun in The Godfather restaurant scene.So there you have it, straight from the horse's mouth, or since we're talking The Godfather, straight from the mouth of the decapitated horse as it lies between your satin sheets. If you meet me in the street and wonder what that scented patch of damp trouser around my crotch, it's only my snub nosed water pistol leaking lemon water. Of course, when dogs attack I need to learn to make my first reaction one of dropping my trousers. Not sure this is sensible given my need to flee but there's really no point in consulting the experts if you don't follow their advice.
Monday, January 27, 2014
The Pitbull Conundrum
Sunday, January 26, 2014
Writing Again
It also meant that I drew nothing last night, or at least, earlier in the evening, I drew only this quick doodle for a project I'm slowly working on between every other job. I suppose it counts if my purpose is to post whatever caricature drawing I do each day. The coming week promises to be a freakshow of hellish proportions and I'll be surprised if I'm in any sane state of mind by next Saturday. Despite that, I'm making another new resolution based on a promise I made in response to a comment by Nathan deGargoyle. I intend to write more blog posts. I know why I stopped writing long pieces and that was simply because I felt a waste of energy. It isn't, I know, but I just wish the effort actually produced some real world results such as little quality food on the table. The answer to that particular riddle is obviously to write better, write more, and send more things away. So I'll make that my third resolution of the New Year just gone and I'll start tomorrow, providing the coming week leaves me any hours to think or affords me any sanity. Saturday, January 25, 2014
Friday, January 24, 2014
Walking Through My Subconscious With Stephen Fry
Thursday, January 23, 2014
Maybe Not Jon Stewart
Bang, Boff, and Wow!
Wednesday, January 22, 2014
The Journalist's Blog
Tuesday, January 21, 2014
Hoffman: A Work in Progress
Just a Hoffman caricature as part of my current ambition of drawing one celebrity a day for the whole month... Monday, January 20, 2014
A Tom Cruise Doodle and a Rant about E-Publishing
In case you can't tell, my attempt at drawing a caricature last night was meant to be Tom Cruise. Cruise has always been a challenge and I occasionally come back to give it another try. There's something about certain (usually handsome) faces which make caricaturing them so damn difficult. I look at how other people capture Cruise's likeness and I sit there humbled by their skill. This is better than any of my previous efforts but still not right. I think it's the teeth… This is the second blog post of the day which perhaps gives a hint that this is also the second day I've remembered to turn on my SAD lamp. I'm basking in its intense light as I hammer away at this keyboard with more focus and energy than I've felt in a very long time. Yesterday I mentioned that I'd turned my attention to a book I'd written a year ago. Today, I'm actively working on it and finding myself surprised at the effort I'd previously expended. I also mentioned yesterday that there were thirty illustrations in the book but counting them last night I discovered that I'd actually drawn more than eighty. I'm a fool to myself. I should never have stopped working on it, though something must have happened to distract me. Perhaps it was just the grind of writing and drawing and feeling like it would be for nothing. It's hard not to be disillusioned when the work you produce seems to amuse only yourself. An article I read somewhere over the weekend said that most writers (I think the percentage was somewhere in the high nineties) earn less than £600 a year from their writing. It's a depressing thought, though I blame Amazon partly for that. Perhaps I'm no better than the rest but e-publishing has opened the market to every illiterate hack able to hammer away at a keyboard for 30,000 words and then brazen enough to call it a novel. It has done to publishing what successive governments have done to teaching: removing the element of highly-trained professionalism in favour of cheapness and ubiquity. The market is vastly dominated by badly written erotica and fifth-rate romances whilst Amazon continues to encourage e-book writers to sell their books for pennies whilst the big companies charge the same price as their paper editions. I've spoken before about the long tail syndrome where Amazon make huge profits on the meagre dreams of millions of authors but I don't see how that liberates us. It puts writers in thrall to their ambitions and the only people other than Amazon making money are the charlatans standing in the middle, acting as 'editors' and offering professional publishing services for which naïve writers pay believing it will make a difference. There is only one truth I've learned about publishing and this is it: only the marketing matters. As is proved year upon year, the most incomprehensible jibberish can be a publishing sensation so long as they get the marketing right and in order to get the marketing right, you really need the money only real publishers can offer. In other words: the technology has changed but the game is pretty much the same. I'll end my rant there before it develops into the full fever. My book might definitely be classed in the category of light humour but I hope it's not toilet literature. I won't know that until I get some feedback and I've yet to find somebody to read it. I'm not sure who my ideal reader would be. I need somebody intelligent enough to see the seriousness beyond the craziness yet with enough humour to realise that none of it should be taken too seriously. If anybody is reading this and if you know anybody like that then please forward their details. The alternative will be to e-publish this sucker and dump it onto Amazon just so I can forget about it. I hate doing that. It's the ultimate waste of hard work. Another LFC Comic Strip
Sunday, January 19, 2014
A Bit of Light
Saturday, January 18, 2014
Just In Time...
Friday, January 17, 2014
The Devil Baby
Since I'm trying to write something, I thought I'd post last night's unfinished doodle. This story and this story combined to produce this cartoon. Thursday, January 16, 2014
An Ed Miliband Cartoon feat. Ed The Mighty Balls
Drawn late last night, the background drawn sitting in Nero this afternoon and then waiting for a train this evening. I could have carried on and at one point I thought about colouring it in but I'm trying to stick with my resolution: one caricature a day. Wednesday, January 15, 2014
The Hit List
Oh, how there's villainy afoot! The poisonous Clinton clan are at it again, playing politics on the clean green lawns of Washington DC… Or so the media would like us to believe. The Clintons might be slinging their faeces around but I doubt if anybody could tell if they happened to be standing in the political pig yard of frontline American politics. Politics is a stinking business and the laborers aren't known for having the cleanest of fingers. Knowing the people out to harm you is the very same game as knowing where and when to make alliances. It's the beating cholesterol soaked heart of politics and it has been ever thus since the first tribe agreed to stop stealing sheep from their neighbours in exchange for a couple of nubiles and a bushel of that miraculous new crop known as 'wheat'. There's an arch moment in that unappreciated political satire, 'The Campaign', when the two candidates stand shaking hands at the beginning of a debate, smiling as the cameras fire. All looks decent, upbeat, and civilized, until the camera moves closer and we hear the candidate's words whispered under their breath and squeezed out between those insincere smiles. They're uttering the foulest insults at each other and that is the reality of politics I recognise and the only reality I believe. I haven't got a 'shit list' but it wouldn't be a flight of fantasy to imagine myself writing one. I guess most people feel the same even if they wouldn't like to go on the record and admit it. What would require a flight of fantasy, possibly requiring strong medication derived from Hopi magic, would be imagining a person with a soul so clean that they would never think bad thing of another person. Now that is a thought that sends a shiver rattling up my spine. Good hair and bad skin is the political archetype I see gazing out of the TV screen every night, as if the strong hair can distract from the bad complexion hinting at bad living, bad habits, and, no doubt, questionable morality. Political types always promote purity and it makes them unbelievable as both politicians and people. It's the curse of Obama, the man who could do no wrong but was destined to ultimately do some wrong, even when he was still trying to do right. He's the man who tried to walk upright with shin splints courtesy of the NSA. The fact that he still hasn't closed Guantanamo doesn't make him a bad man, merely a real man in the real world. I find something satisfying in that. So too, in my eyes, the Clintons' hit list doesn't put a black mark by their names any more than Big Bill's taste for kneeling interns changed my opinion of what he did for America. As far a recent memory goes, Clinton didn't seem that bad a President, unless you really want to offer up an unhealthy dose of hindsight and blame him for not slapping a battlefield nuke on top of Bin Laden's hideout in Zhawar Kili al-Badr back in 1998. More significantly now, Hilary didn't strike me as a bad Secretary of State. She also knew what to laugh and play the clown and I find that more reassuring than all the serious words and frowns to camera. Human fallibility is the missing ingredient in too much political campaigning. My instinct is to distrust the politician who stands behind his family and quotes from the Bible. That's not to say that I prefer my politicians to be open about their villainy but if there's a degree of the huckster about them, then they seem eminently more believable. I wouldn't vote for either Nigel Farage or George Galloway but they seem cut from the same piece of shyster worsted. They are dirty players in a dirty game. I don't expect too much from them, so they only surprise me when they don't act like the enormous malignant arseholes I expect my politicians to be. Tuesday, January 14, 2014
A Jeremy Clarkson Cartoon
Drawn late last night, day 13 of my New Year Resolution to draw a cariacture day. This one was inspired by this story over at The Guardian. As I said over there, what never fails to astonish me as both a cyclist and a pedestrian is how drivers seem desperate to shave fractions of a second off their journey time by bullying us off the road, despite the fact that they're bound to get to wherever they're going far quicker than we are. Around here, drivers are so desperate to save themselves time, they take advantage of Sundays by driving all the way up to the front door of the shops in our local pedestrianized high street, the large empty free-to-park market area (less than 15 seconds walk away) clearly being too remote. I've come to the conclusion that there's something about giving individuals the controls of a car that makes them unreasonable and power hungry. Monday, January 13, 2014
Lectures from the Four Million Pound Perch
Takes off her artificial Hair: Now, picking out a Crystal Eye, She wipes it clean, and lays it by.Politics has all the nobility of massaging puss from a blackhead. We are brainwashed from the cradle to believe that every vote matters but statisticians can now tell us to a precise degree that a great many votes simply don't matter. My own vote is supposedly one of the most worthless in the country, valued at just thirty three pence at the last election. Compare that with the £1.07 spent on every 'more valuable than most' vote in George Osborne's Tatton constituency. (If anybody cares to take the time, I'd like to know what your votes are worth. Perhaps you could leave the answer in the comments...) But what is the value of one thinking considering individual when swathes of the country can be moved by dark rhetoric? George Osborne made a speech this past week in which he spoke directly to a powerful electorate who believe that the world is full of benefit bandits empowered by a liberal left who are out to destroy the country though the insidious power of compassion. It is motivating language sure to translate into jaundiced figures shuffling balefully into the ballot booths come the next election but if Osborne's words represent reality then I'm fairly blind to that world. All I see are people stuck in hopeless situations, where a mixture of ignorance and desperation breeds a culture of rat survival. There are some who prevail but they're the savage and wilful, shell-suited hicksters taught to leverage every advantage from a dishevelled system and to make more money by whatever means outside the system. It's not hard to spot them and anybody living in their community can point them out, living as they usually do behind torn curtains of some cheap-rented semi at the end of the road but with a fifty thousand pound 4x4 parked outside. Nobody truly living in poverty chooses to do so unless they're foolish enough to believe in higher things such as God or art or, the saints preserve us, writing a blog. Democracy is supposed to be the saviour of the common man in the same way that technology is supposed to save us all from the grind of menial jobs. The reality is so different to what was promoted in the brochures. Technology has distracted us whilst the jobs became even more menial. The simple dictum is that democracy should mean most to those people at the bottom of the heap because they have the most to gain by an equal distribution of power. But Nature seems to abhor equilibrium as much as it abhors a vacuum. Individual votes mean little, not always because many lack the intelligence to use that vote but because circumstances leads most to believe that the system cannot be changed. Politics matters little to the average person not because they grow tired of Westminster scandals and tales of knickers and kickbacks but, simply, because politics so rarely impact on individual lives. The greatest mistake of Thatcher's premiership was to bring in the Poll Tax, a policy that impacted greatly on individual lives. She paid the price and, since then, politicians have learned the golden rule of not rocking the boat. Or, at least, choosing when to rock the boat so the wake doesn't disturb their constituents… It's understandable that they govern that way. The country has become too big to be ruled from London where the debate in parliament might be given all the media coverage but it singularly ignores the real world of the other kind of politics, the politics that matter, the dreary unglamorous politics of local library closures or potholes. To talk about national politics is to denigrate the very word 'politics'. The national 'argument' is more about ideological gamesmanship, played by men and women who largely go unaffected by the hypotheses they create and enforce on the rest of the country. George Osborne preaches austerity from a lofty perch as heir apparent to the Osborne baronetcy. He talks about 'hard working people' (a not too subtle code meaning 'not the workshy') although he has never himself held down a proper job, having moved straight from university into the Conservative party where he worked as an adviser before becoming an MP. He is a thoroughbred among political hounds, sniffing the uric tang of policy shifts around every Westminster lamppost and knowing that the bray of the nationalistic trumpet promises the taste of socialist blood. His personal fortune is supposedly around £4 million. It's an often repeated argument that a man who knows such wealth is incapable of making judgements about poverty but it's we well knuckled one. How is he to understand poverty when he's never had to choose between buying a meal or a book?
Sunday, January 12, 2014
Some Starkey Attempts
Saturday, January 11, 2014
The Most Contradictory Rejection Slip Ever?
Guess that's an ironic 'yes.' Anyway, here (below) are the four rejected cartoons. To say that these four cartoons represented the end of my cartooning career might be to overstate the situation. I took a month to come up with these monstrosities based on the damn difficult concept of 'man in motion'. However, since I finished these, I've felt a serious shift in confidence and I guess I'm still trying to recover by drawing the recent caricatures (surely the weakest form of gag cartooning). To get these back today was about the worst time for me to get them. Apparently I'm a lousy employee and a lousy cartoonist. And this self-obsessed moaning blog post proves that I'm a lousy blogger too. Oh, bugger. I'm going to get drunk… Except, when I type 'drunk' I mean 'spend my Saturday afternoon trying to be part of a team, be communicative, and do the work with a smile on my face'...
Friday, January 10, 2014
The Chris Christie Cartoon
Day seven or eight of my New Year's resolution... I'm losing count, which is probably a good thing. This is a quick cartoon drawn sitting on a train into Manchester yesterday. Thursday, January 09, 2014
A Boris Doodle
I wouldn't normally post something like this but my New Year resolution demands that I do. One caricature a day is my goal and I wasn't going to miss a day simply because I hadn't finished it. This was intended to be a better caricature of the London mayor but no sooner had I sat down late last night to begin my usual end-of-day drawing than the email chirped up and I found myself with work to do. That's a problem with being freelance yet working for people who expect you to jump at the sound of a whistle. You work strange hours and sometimes you're not entirely sure if you're not working too many hours in a month. When all things are calculated, I probably sell myself for well below the minimum wage but what price freedom? Or, at least, the perception of freedom. Today has been a little more successful. I moved myself beyond the call of the whistle and I've actually written something for tomorrow's blog as well as finished a drawing. I also spent the afternoon in Manchester, partly because I needed to buy a birthday card but also because I needed time away from my desk and (I have to say this in hushed tones) away from my ebullient sister who, for the first time in months, appears to be feeling better thanks to the advice of the consultant we spoke to on Saturday. He didn't so much provide a miracle cure as provide the advice to ignore the bad advice of our local GP. In Manchester, I hit the usual shops and as is usually the case, Waterstones was full of books I couldn't afford. Unlike 99% of the time I visit, it actually had books I actually wanted but I had to forgo the hardback copy of Robert Crumb's 'Weirdo Years'. In the end, I settled for a book of political journalism which isn't always the definition of a good time but I occasionally have a hankering after the stuff. Once thing I did notice as I stood in the the science section of the big Deansgate Waterstones: it was empty, yet across the aisle, the spirituality section was packed with five or six people. What does that say about science, spirituality, or, indeed, people? I also visited Claus Oulsen for a new bike lock and stood in the queue behind a big guy who was getting frustrated that the queue wasn't moving. A little old lady was standing ahead of us and she just wasn't shifting. It took us the best part of two or three minutes before we realized we were actually standing behind a mannequin covered in a pac-a-mac. He laughed. I laughed. The world seemed okay. Wednesday, January 08, 2014
My Anecdotl Animation
An Arbitrary Vince Cable Cartoon
Another cartoon as part of my current fad/resolution to draw a face a day. I try to turn them into something at the end but, as this one shows, the joke isn't the point. I'm currently far too busy to think these things through and sometimes I end up with a picture in need of a gag. Tonight or tomorrow, I'll also post the result of my month-long animation work... Tuesday, January 07, 2014
Random Thoughts on Simon Hoggart and Ronald Searle
Click to enlarge[/caption] Yet it's strange that I think back on that letter today. In Chester on Saturday, I'd spent five minutes walking around The Works after we were done at the hospital. We were wasting time until our train home and I was feeling so justified in my finding a specialist for my sister via Doctoralia that I was in the mood to treat myself. My eyes opened a little wider as I spotted a small pile of books on the shelf. They marked the last publication of the great Ronald Searle. Les Très Riches Heures de Mrs Mole is a series of illustrations that Searle drew for his wife as she underwent prolonged medical treatment. It's a poignant but ultimately sad little book and I couldn't bring myself to buy it, despite my loving all of Ronald Searle's work. I'd written to Searle back in 2010 and I had got a reply, much to the disgust of my friend Stu who never had much success getting replies when he wrote to great illustrators. As I thumbed through the Mrs Mole book, I thought of Searle's postcard, sitting in my fat file of replies. He'd generously taken time to write a response in his distinctive spidery scrawl, despite his wife's battle with illness, yet his reply was perhaps tinged with a certain weariness when he wrote: 'The best of luck in the world of illustration but from long experience I can say it's a good thing you have your chisel-throwing to fall back on!'
Only a fool would disregard the advice when the greatest illustrator/cartoonist in the world tells you to give up but I've always been a fool and I continue to scrawl my cartoons that remain unpublished and, I think it's fair to say, unwanted. In a way, I suppose in both cases, my letters had arrived in much feted lives but troubled by real concerns. It makes me wonder if the world every really needs spoof letters, tricksters, and men of shallow delights. I begin to wonder how much I might have intruded in a way that really was unwelcome and a just little bit wrong. I don't know… I do know that I miss Searle enormously and I'll miss that swine Hoggart too. He brought some rare humour into British politics. And if he clearly thought my book a rat of an idea, I like to think that he had honour of being the first to tell me so.A Cartoon About European Politics
You have to admire Merkel, hobbling around for days before she'd realised she'd fractured her pelvis. I wonder how long Osborne will wander around before he remembers that he hit his head those many years ago. Still, six solid days of blogging and my New Year resolution holds. I will, of course, eventually run out of steam or I'll have a day involving punctures, animal slurry, and a gypsy curse which makes it impossible to blog and then there will be a long gap as I seek psychiatric help about my inability to blog. However, for the moment, I'm celebrating nearly a week of being back to webface and my cartoon ideas are slowly returning. Tonight I might draw Michael Bay running off stage at the Samsung event at the CES in Los Vegas ([drool] where they launched their 12 inch Samsung Note Pro [/drool]) but perhaps it will be a picture about Boris and ringfencing. My immediate job is to render out a video I promised somebody a week ago and then I want to finish something I wrote yesterday that needs to be posted today. That's my big ambition for the day: two blog posts inside 24 hours. It's been done before but I never thought I'd manage to do it again. Monday, January 06, 2014
The Owen Paterson Cartoon
Day 5 and my New Year's resolution holds. I managed to doodle this last night after working until 2.30am building a damn website. I also plan to write something this afternoon but we all know what they say about the best laid plans of mice and men. Sunday, January 05, 2014
January 4th: David Jason
Fourth day and the New Year resolution to doodle a face a day continues. I drew this yesterday sitting on a train into Chester or sitting in the Café Nero beneath the city wall. The response to my blog post before Christmas made a difference. Yesterday my sister took the steps to see a consultant privately. I'd previously discovered the Doctoralia website and used it to find the best expert on her particular condition. Last Wednesday, we booked an appointment. It's a stunningly good service that's easy to use and pinpoints the experts in your region. We booked a noon appointment, travelled all morning to get there, only to discover that the hospital didn't seem to know anything about the Doctoralia service or, at least, didn't have the mechanism in place to turn virtual bookings into real bookings at the front desk. It wasn't looking good but we were glad when we learned the doctor would see us. We had to wait until he'd seen his other patients but eventually we were called in. We entered expecting very little but I'm happy to say that we left feeling very different. Bad experiences has taught us to expect little from doctors but we emerged shaking with delight. 'Christ he was brilliant,' my sister whispered as we walked to the front desk. I thought the same. After years of being told that my sister's pain isn't significant because, to quote other doctors, 'there are no organs there', we were shown diagrams of what was there and it was explained what her problem might be and what steps we can now take to help her. She'll now have tests and we'll go back for the results but, without going into too much trouble, one of her problems might be caused by other doctors changing her medication to a cheaper form of the drug she's been prescribed to help her pain. We've now taken steps to remedy this and I hope we'll see an improvement. I just wanted to write a little something to thank the people who gave me feedback either in the comments or via email. It's good to know I have readers who follow much of the nonsense I write or draw but it's even better to know you read my rare wanderings into the realm of the serious. Friday, January 03, 2014
January 2nd: Susanna Reid
Thursday, January 02, 2014
1st January: Piers Morgan
Wednesday, January 01, 2014
Christmas Doodles







