The luggage cart disappearing into the wall is the coup de grace.
The luggage cart disappearing into the wall is the coup de grace.
I’ll be there all three days, and will also be giving a panel talk with compadres David Malki (Wondermark) and Jeff Zugale (Just a Bit Off) on webcomics and the like.
Comic strip fans should take note: Bloom County cartoonist Berke Breathed will be there as well, which is rare and kinda awesome. Also make sure to swing by to see Cari Corene, the Sheldon summer intern, who’ll be exhibiting in the Artist Alley tables!
For those coming, we’ve put together the o-fficial Sheldon guide to the show. Click HERE for the full-size, printable file, or click the image below.
And here’s a link to the Long Beach Comic-Con site itself.






Jeremy: You are awesome. Thank you for these pics!
I always love to see the ways folks frame up their originals. Drop me a pic when you get yours framed up!




Dave and Cari, here in the studio.
But here’s the deal: We need more of this. Cartoonists, all you need to do is remember back to your own young adult life, and you know this to be true. Ours is a craft with few formal schools of instruction…and even among them, every graduate could benefit from the insights a pro could provide. Cari hails from SCAD, one of the best cartooning schools in the world, but she (and I!) learned a huge amount watching Dave work. The truth is, cartooning is a weird amalgamation of skills: A cartoonist is a writer, director, casting agent, costumer, stage manager, set and lighting designer *and* actor in these little, 2-D performances. And young cartoonists can’t be expected to master all of those easily. They need and deserve a helping hand to skip them through years of trial-and-error.
Tonight, as I write this, I’m hit by a really strong conviction that it’s our job, as artists, to pay it forward to that next generation.
Growing up, I would’ve done anything for an internship or one-on-one sit-down with a newspaper comic strip cartoonist. It was everything I wanted in a career, but it seemed like they had some elusive, locked-away career knowledge, and that there was no clear path on how I could attain it. It shouldn’t be like that. For those of us who’ve been blessed enough to find a career in cartooning, we owe it to the craft to pass along what we’ve learned.
If you’re a cartoonist, then, a humble request: Seek out opportunities that let you share what you know with younger cartoonists. Contact your nearest sequential art colleges at SCAD, CCS, SVA, or any school in your neck of the woods. Pay it forward.




Thanks, Garrett!
Thanks, Toby!

