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San Diego Comic Con: SP-N7
Dates: Jul 22 - 26
Location: San Diego Convention Center, 111 Harbor Dr, San Diego, CA 92101, USA ( MAP)Details:Clint & Dawn Wolf will be at San Diego Comic Con, as Lab Reject Studios. We will be at booth N7 in Small Press.








3 thoughts on “555 – Concepts Of A Plan”
Dr. Norman (not a real doctor)
Oh for crissake …
Crazyman
I hope she’s got more than 12% of a plan… 😅
Mattexian
Hopefully she’s not pulling a “Leroy Jenkins!”
Latest Comics
#197. 189 – Bad Mojo
24 Nov 27, 2013
#196. 188 – Calm After The Storm
21 Nov 20, 2013
#195. 187 – Drama Surgery
23 Nov 13, 2013
#194. 186 – Technicalities
23 Nov 06, 2013
#193. 185 – The Sixth Stage Of Grief
23 Oct 30, 2013
#192. 184 – La Siesta
24 Oct 23, 2013
#191. 183 – Communication Breakdown
29 Oct 09, 2013
#190. 182 – Isolated Incident
28 Oct 02, 2013
#189. 181 – What Happened Last Night
42 Sep 25, 2013
#188. 180 – Nothing Up His Sleeve
44 Sep 18, 2013
#187. 179 – The Most Dangerous Game
44 Sep 11, 2013
#186. 178 – Revision History
36 Sep 04, 2013
#185. 177 – An Uplifting Presentation
67 Aug 28, 2013
#184. 176 – War And Remembrance
61 Aug 21, 2013
#183. EPISODE EIGHT
50 Aug 19, 2013
#182. 175 – The Big Picture (END OF EPISODE 7)
63 Jul 10, 2013
#181. 174 – Call Waiting
57 Jul 03, 2013
#180. 173 – A Bang And A Whimper
25 Jun 26, 2013
#179. 172 – Rising Hatred
20 Jun 19, 2013
#178. 171 – Guilty As Charged
16 Jun 12, 2013
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555 – Concepts Of A Plan
Ancestry of the “long form”: the serial thrillers
“It makes me wonder, on nearly every page, what’s going to happen next.
Simple as that. A little thing, really. And yet, in the end, it’s everything.”
It’s absolutely true to point out, and from day 1 of Zombie Ranch I’ve always tried to achieve that goal. But as with all “simple” aspects of the creative arts, it’s not quite as easy as it sounds. Zombie Ranch, and the comic McCloud specifically singled out, The Lay of the Lacrymer, both belong to a category of webcomics known as “long form”. The definition of this category can get fuzzy — you could argue the term comes from the fact that you’d usually need to scroll your browser window in order to read it, as opposed to a “strip” webcomic like PVP that fits neatly into a standard screen resolution (this, of course, predates the explosion of mobile devices). You could also argue that it represents a webcomic dedicated to a longer, more dramatic story continuity rather than getting to comedy punchlines. Either way, there’s a lot of bleedover since PVP has had ongoing storylines, and Questionable Content often ends on a punchline even though you’ve got to travel downwards to get there. If you held a gun to my head and asked me to define it, then I suppose I’d say that at its core, the long form webcomic is definitely more dependent on “What happens next?”, no matter what actual structure it takes. Rather than being a self-contained chuckle, like Lucy convincing Charlie Brown to once again make a doomed run at the football, the long form wants to pull the reader along to the future, to thinking beyond the immediate. And that’s where it starts to get complicated, because long form webcomics also tend to have a slower update schedule. That means you not only want to keep luring the reader along with the promise of more, but you also want to balance that with enough immediate satisfaction to tide them over until next time. Even with a non-strip format that allows for more than three or four small panels at a time, that’s not an easy tightrope to walk. It’s a special style of storytelling you can’t learn from reading standard print comics (which have several immediate pages to spread the tale across) or gag-a-day offerings (which often don’t need to bother with long-term continuity). Where do you find inspiration, beyond that of the last ten years or so? What ‘masters’ can you study, the way humor strip authors can pore over the works of a Schulz, Kelly, or Watterson? The answer suddenly came to me, and oddly enough it was courtesy of all the parts of the newspaper comics page I ignored and skipped over when I was a little kid. The long form community does have its legacy, its ancestry, and its masters of the art. Hearken back, friends and neighbors, and remember (or perhaps, if you’re young enough, be introduced to!) the dramatic serial.Calendar
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