While the end-of-the-world scenario will be rife with unimaginable horrors, we believe that the pre-end period will be filled with unprecedented opportunities for profit.
If you have any problems at all, don't hesitate to shut up.
It's not the ink, it's the think.
The generations that were exposed to sitcom have the people actually saying the line, saying the joke, whereas sort of before that you have much more observational humor.
Humor is basically a cognitive process. And it's a creative process not only on the part of the cartoonist but on the part of the viewer.
There are no cartoons about happy marriages.
A lot of what the Internet is showing is that talent is more disperse than gatekeepers such as myself...
As a cartoonist I do what I find funny. As an editor I have a broader approach realizing that humor is inherently subjective and I don't want my preferences to rule out what others might like.
I do find that humor helps in relationships. It certainly helps in my marriage now because I'm a very, very fallible person. And if I wasn't funny I'd be kicked right out the door.
The digital realm give cartoons and cartoonists more possibilities for exposure.
There is humor that's just whimsy, that we smile at, but the humor that we laugh at, someone has to be - someone's dignity has to be reduced.
I know everybody wants humor to be subversive and speak truth to power. I don't think power's been listening, incidentally.
Each cartoon needs the right amount of wrong.
There is no Algorithm for Humor
The most popular cartoon of mine is a guy on the phone looking at his appointment book and saying "No, Thursday's out. How about never, is never good for you?"