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Happy Birthday to Hubris

Nov27
by Greg Cravens on November 27, 2012 at 8:32 am
Posted In: Blog

I forgot to mention it.  I did the same last year, too.  But Hubriscomics.com is TWO years old!  Happy birthday to it.  It’s been a lot of fun getting this far- selling a few books, adding Hubris to gocomics, adding a little advertising, advertising Hubris himself on other sites, and sending Hubris off into the most daring story arc I’ve ever conceived.  I’ve got more plans in the works, too.  Maybe some comics conventions, possibly some sales in some odd markets here and there.  I’d like to animate the Header art.  Superfan Allan says I should do a Youtube channel. That sounds exciting.  Might see if there’s a market to sell the original art or pencil layouts of the cartoons themselves.  Any of those things sound like fun to you guys?  If I go the Comics convention route, I think I should have ‘Team Hubris’ patches made up.  Folks that have them would get discounts or free stuff… plus they’d be wearing a cool ‘Team Hubris’ patch.

Gotta get back to work.  Hubris, Paste, Lowell, Kara and the rest aren’t going to get themselves in trouble without me.

└ Tags: 2, advertising, Birthday, GoComics, hubris, Team Hubris, years
6 Comments

Happy Thanksgiving.

Nov22
by Greg Cravens on November 22, 2012 at 9:32 am
Posted In: Dirty Pictures

If you’re in the States… Happy Thanksgiving.  For the rest of the world, go outside and play!  ‘Specially you guys in Australia.  Nice there just now, isn’t it?

 

└ Tags: skate, skateboard, skatepark, Thanksgiving, Turkey
1 Comment

Hernando Rocks… and Skates!

Nov18
by Greg Cravens on November 18, 2012 at 11:20 am
Posted In: Dirty Pictures

In Hernando MS, they’re raising funds to build a town skatepark.  At the fundraiser a couple of weekends ago, some of the more hardcore of the fundraisers got a little face time.  They also have some Facebook Time.  Give them some of your time- click on over there… by clicking HERE.

 

└ Tags: fundraiser, Hernando Skates, rock, skateboard, skatepark
 Comment 

The Scourge

Nov15
by Greg Cravens on November 15, 2012 at 9:12 am
Posted In: Blog

 

Cartooning- specifically comic strips- has taken an odd turn over the past couple of decades.  The decline of the newspapers as the #1 source of information for most Americans has a lot to do with it.  Way back (not THAT far back) when every major city in America had at least two newspapers, the value of any single comic strip or writer’s column could be measured in dollars gained or lost when a newspaper quit publishing it or started publishing it.  If one paper quit publishing Doonesbury, for instance, and it’s sales and subscriptions declined while the other local paper picked up Doonesbury and its sales increased, then you could say that Doonesbury had a particular instantly provable value to a newspaper.

These days, not so much.

A writer I work with is also an auditor of newspaper circulation.  Circulation (sales of newspapers, eyes available to advertisers in that newspaper) is how the newspapers set their advertising rates.  Subscriptions and sales don’t generate a newspaper’s main income stream- it sets the scale for the newspaper to generate it’s main income stream… advertising. The newspapers are really good at inflating their circulation numbers in lots of ways, so they can charge more for the ads they run and therefore stay in business.

But I mentioned the decline of the papers, right?  There’s that whole supply-and-demand thing.  If advertisers are now running off to other venues, then the newspapers have to either drop their ad rates no matter what their circulation numbers are, or create a new value to advertising within their pages.

I hear from a lot of people (editorial cartoonists, newspaper illustrators, random newspaper employees, and circulation auditors) that the average newspaper’s decision makers are unwilling to make their jobs any  more complicated by doing things that might attract readers.  In other words, they’ve already given up.  Sometimes, it’s even a matter of not backing up to a pre-automated method of doing things that’s the hang-up.  Specifically, the idea that newspapers might draw in just the sort of interested reader they want to/need to by using webcomics on their comics page- hip, attention-grabbing, high-traffic comics used cheaply because it’s just another revenue stream to THOSE cartoonists- not the be-all, end-all of their income like for syndicated cartoons.  The editor of the comics page of the paper I’m talking about said that it wouldn’t work because they now use a computer program that automatically drops in the daily comic strips and no one has to do any work.  If the newspaper used webcomics, then the page would have to be worked on by someone every day, and then they couldn’t continue to leave at 2:00.

Of course, the other side of this is that it used to be that the only way to make a comic strip earn you a living was to be syndicated.  You could draw a comic strip for your local paper, but one paper doesn’t make a wage out of one comic strip.  The new thing is webcomics, where you have to be your own syndicate and sell anything and everything you can- T-shirts, hats, books, comics, sketches, originals, and of course, advertising- in order to make a fraction of what the syndicates used to be able to do for you.   Stinky, for most would-be cartoonists, but it is an option.  It’s a whole new business to be in.

There you have it.  If you’re an old-guard syndicated cartoonist, it’s the beginning of the end.  If you’re a young cartoonist who has time and energy to float a webcomic and work it like a business, it’s the beginning of the beginning.

And that brings me, in a hugely roundabout fashion, to my point:

Hubris has another ad on the site.  There are some Google ads which pay a tiny bit every so often, and a Foxy Bingo ad which will stay up for at least a year per agreement, and now I have a Project Wonderful ad.  It’s over there on the right hand side just below the Hubris Book Ad.  Right now, the bidding is young and tiny, but if you see anything keen on there you’d like to read, by all means, click that thang and check it out.  The more click-throughs there are from Hubris, the better reputation I get for being a good adspace to run in, and the revenue goes up by tiny bits.

And there you go.  The business of Hubris.

Also, I’m about to add stuff onto the Outdoor Galore Store Zazzle page, just in time for your Christmas shoppin’.

Ugh.  I’m a money-grubbin’ hack now.  Gotta go skate.

└ Tags: ads, advertising, book, circulation, comic strips, comics, hubris, Newspapers, Outdoor Galore Store, syndicate, syndication, zazzle
3 Comments

Skatepark sunrise

Nov13
by Greg Cravens on November 13, 2012 at 5:55 am
Posted In: Dirty Pictures

The other day at the skatepark, the newspaper (the Commercial Appeal, who no longer runs The Buckets and fired their staff editorial cartoonist Bill Day, and therefore can be ignored.) sent Chris Desmond out to photograph the lovely and talented Aaron Schafer, who was instrumental in getting the city to back a gorgeous skatepark and quit just putting up signs everywhere else that said “no skating”.  Chris took photos of other people who were there, too.  This is one he took of me.  Note the elaborately colored helmet I took from my oldest son.  Note the way the sunlight plays upon the bristles where my hair used to be.  Oh, yes, I’m one fine lookin’ stud.

Photo by Chris Desmond

That was, indeed sarcasm, for those of you who didn’t catch it.  I look like someone’s dad at the skatepark. I am someone’s dad at the skatepark. But at least I’m one of the dads that skate.

└ Tags: Aaron Schafer, Bill Day, Chris Desmond, Greg Cravens, helmet, photo, skatepark, The Buckets, Tobey
2 Comments
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