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Why mobile is the future of comic strips
Matt Groening, the creator of the long-running Fox animated series The Simpsons , recently announced that his even longer-running cartoon strip Life in Hell will soon vanish from the pages of its flagship newspaper LA Weekly , where it has appeared for the last 22 years. Groening is not ...
Matt Groening looks to the future
Matt Groening looks to the future
cnn.com — "Futurama's" gang comes back for "Into the Wild Green Yonder," the fourth (and final?) DVD film of the series. (more) Matt Groening looks to the future
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Are the Kindle, iPhone the future of comics?
The Daily Cartoonist — ... Jason Ankeny writes over on the Fierce Mobile Content blog that he believes that the comics future is best served on the mobile platform like Amazon’s Kindle and Apple’s iPhone. Unlike webcomics which has “proven a mixed bag both creatively and commercially,” both platforms support a revenue model of readers purchasing the e-book (or app) which supports the creator’s work. ...

March 9, 2009: Many, many bullet lists
Journalista - the news weblog of The Comics Journal — ... & Jen.)   [Top Story] Life in interesting times Joe Eskenazi documents the fight to keep San Francisco shop Al’s Comics afloat. (Link via Kevin Melrose.) Steve Holland has more on the threatened end of U.K. kids’ comic The DFC. (Thanks to Matthew Badham for e-mailing me the link.) Tim Broderick and Jason Ankeny look at how technology might influence the future of comics. (Second link ...

Related: simpsons cartoon
The Simpsons Guest StarsNeatorama
The Simpsons have had quite a few guest stars over its 20-year run. In this Lunchtime Quiz from mental_floss, you are asked to identify which star played each of 15 characters on the show. So far, the average score is 57%, although that could have been affected by my dismal outcome. Link