What he said

Some guy

I don’t press this over and over, but I guess with the start of the year this would be a good time to emphasize what a lot of my fellow cartoonists are also saying: the financial climate right now, as you might have noticed, is utter shit. A lot of them are struggling to keep the clients they have, and others like me are unable to find clients at all. It never, never, never hurts to send an e-mail or letter to the editors of your local alt-weekly or newspaper and tell them how great you think mine or anyone else’s work is. That’s the best way for a cartoonist to get and or keep getting paid.

I’ve lost a couple papers in the last few months — one editor decided they couldn’t afford the exhorbitant couple of bucks it costs to run my cartoon each week anymore, while another freaked out and decided that the solution to crashing ad revenue and so on was to try a different cartoon! I’m not naming names — it doesn’t do me any good for an editor in unnamed city X to suddenly start getting email from around the globe criticizing his or her editorial judgment — but if the strip does stop running in your local paper, please be sure to send a polite note, or ten, on the topic. Because I expect to see a lot more of this sort of thing over the next year.

And to expand on what August says, it’s never a bad idea to send a note letting them know how much you appreciate being able to read the cartoon in their paper, it’s the reason you remember to pick it up each week, etc., etc. There’s no science to this, they’re just trying to figure it out as they go along, and a little feedback can go a long way.

(August has a new book, by the way.)

U.S. Sending 3,000 Tons of Weaponry to Israel

Merchants of War:

U.S. seeks ship to move arms to Israel

LONDON (Reuters) – The U.S. is seeking to hire a merchant ship to deliver hundreds of tons of arms to Israel from Greece later this month, tender documents seen by Reuters show.

The U.S. Navy’s Military Sealift Command (MSC) said the ship was to carry 325 standard 20-foot containers of what is listed as “ammunition” on two separate journeys from the Greek port of Astakos to the Israeli port of Ashdod in mid-to-late January.

A “hazardous material” designation on the manifest mentions explosive substances and detonators, but no other details were given.

“Shipping 3,000-odd tons of ammunition in one go is a lot,” one broker said, on condition of anonymity.

The rest.

Via KitKat’s Critique, which points out Ashdod is less than 20 miles from Gaza.

For my part, I think Hamas should refuse to discuss any ceasefire that doesn’t include a complete, UN-verified blockade of weaponry shipments to Israel.

The future’s so bright …

Michael Hirschorn has an interesting take on the future of journalism in general, and the New York Times in particular. But I have one small quibble with this:

The best journalists will survive, and eventually thrive. Some will be snapped up by an expanding HuffPo (which is raising millions while its print competitors tank) and by the inevitable competitors that will spring up to imitate its business model, or even by smaller outlets, like Talking Points Memo, which have found that keeping their overhead low allows them to profit from high-quality journalism.

I don’t know if this is true of TPM, but the reason the HuffPo’s business model works so well is that they don’t pay contributors, and have publicly stated that they have no intention of doing so. It’s easy not to be burdened with all the expenses of running a journalistic enterprise if you don’t pay journalists. But maybe this is the future of citizen journalism: former reporters will support themselves working at fast food joints and Wal Mart, while pursuing journalism as a sort of wonderful hobby.

Good luck with that.

As my friend John McCrea says, information wants to be free, but rent wants to be paid. Hard to say how that conflict gets resolved, but the future is rushing up fast.