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8-10-05
Too Good for the Web
It is my humble opinion that there are threecount
them, threevalid reasons a comic should remain entirely
web-based for more than a year. First, and most importantly, it
sucks; suckiness is a solid reason half of the comics on the web will
never see print outside of a vanity press. Second, and this
affects a solid 75% of the non-sucky comics, the artist is unable or
unwilling to maintain a regular schedule (ink-and-paper publishers
don't like posting white space where a comic should be). Third,
and this is where the ones that skip the second reason often get
nailed, the format or subject matter aren't adaptable to the
newspaper formatthey have cursing, or they play with the
"infinite canvas" in some way (most often a drop format).
Jason Seibels doesn't have any of those excuses. His comic, Anywhere
But Here, certainly doesn't suck. It's consistently
funny, with a well-thought plot and carefully defined
characters. He gets a lot of mileage out of joking about his
Bloomsbury style, referring to the obvious influence that Doonesbury
and Bloom County have on his artwork, but there's only an
influence, and ultimately, Seibels is neither as preachy as Trudeau
nor as mean as Breathed in his writing. He cares about his
characters, all of them.
In a nutshell, ABH is the tale of a nameless (he probably has
a name, it's just never come up) hero, trying to get by while
attending his safety college North Dakota University (home of the
only marine biology program not within 1200 miles of a
seacoast). When schools in session, he shares his dorm with a
surly and marginally psychotic iguana named Mozillas and two
demons: Bill, our hero's personal demon (who has lost faith in
his work), and Chuck, a large "enforcer" demon who bears
such a striking resemblance to Alex Karras' character in Blazing Saddles
that the rest of the cast has dubbed him Mongo. For the last
several months our hero has been pursuing a tentative relationship
with Chris, a small-town girl trying gamely to overcome the
socialized decision-making that mark her as trailer-trash. Stir
in a huge cast of supporting characters (that somehow manage not to
become confusing), and there you have it. It's a very solid daily.
That's right, I said daily. With minor exceptions (because
Seibels has to support himself in the real world) ABH is one
of the most reliable dailies in the webcomics world. That's a
pretty good trick. As far as I know, only Howard Tayler and
Scott Kurtz have managed to crank out more uninterrupted dailies
while holding down a full-time "real" job. But then,
Tayler and Kurtz should be in the papers, too.
Like Kurtz and Tayler, Seibel's comic is produced in standard 3-panel
format. He even does a large-format Sunday comic most
weeks. The only thing that might come close to disqualifying ABH
from newspaper publication is his subject matter. As odd as
they are, the characters are pretty realistic, at least in their
reactions to things, and they're very true to themselves.
Seibels keeps the language clean by blacking out expletives, which
are very few and far between. So short of the annoying letters
that editors might receive from trailer trash pointing out that they
would never open their legs for anyone in a Mustang made between 1974
and 1985 (and of course the obligatory Christian blah blah about
demons evil yatta yatta), there really is nothing preventing Seibels
comic from being a newspaper daily.
At least there shouldn't be.
Anywhere But Here by Jason Seibels
Updates: Daily
Caveats: Adult themes, language, Demons based
loosely on Alex Karras, so good it will make you completely
re-examine whether you should waste
time on your crappy scribbles
Rating: