Interview with a Cartoonist
Being funny is not necessarily something with which someone is born. No, it does not hurt, but it it can prevent some major hurdles. In a nutshell, before one even thinks about trying to become funny, that is, if they are naturally not funny, is to learn about editing, and the fact that other people want the punch line and want it fast.
To be honest, growing up, I thought I was a bit of a shy slug and I don’t think I was that far off. Being funny was the last thing on my mind, though I do remember now and then trying to impress my female classmates with some bad attempts at humor.
Though humor is subjective, it is also quick. Nobody has time to listen to a life story before getting to a punch line. Any humorist, no matter what their genre knows that being brief is being professional. Tell the joke or create the cartoon or one liner or whatever the venue, and get on to the next.
I considered Shakespeare’s famous line, “Brevity is the soul of wit”. Even then, he had the insight to know that people’s attention spans are short. Sure, they want to hear your joke or funny story, but they also have other things on their mind. Even if they think something is funny, if it is long-winded, and takes too much of their time, they may consider you “funny”, but chances are they won’t come back for more of your humor.
Consider the cartoonist and humor writer. That would be me. I created a single panel cartoon called Londons Times Cartoons in 1997. I based it on the Shakesperian theory that humor was and is the soul of wit. No long drawn out captions. Sometimes no captions at all. The picture would tell the story. It was an experiment. It was off the wall. That year, I posted less than a hundred cartoons on my website. Though I had thought of many others, those were the ones that past the litany test of “what is funny” to me.
Ten years later I have one of the most visited cartoon sites on the Internet and over 8500 single panel cartoons. So how did it all happen? It was a process, doc.
I don’t think there is just one road toward making something like that happen. In my case, it was mainly listening to other people whom I felt were funny, reading autobiographies of funny persons, and studying humor. I watched sitcoms. I went to funny movies. I noticed one-liners in real life were really not much different than one liners in a cartoon.
I liked what I heard and it was easy to repeat. Instant value.
Another element of “being funny” at least in the marketplace is to find one’s niche or voice. Sometimes that can take time. A lot of time. In my case, I tried stand-up comedy, acting and other such venues for a number of years. The problem was that I didn’t understand the art well and was not able to perfect it to the degree to which I wanted.
So I tried writing, and I finally settled for cartooning. I had read the late great Charles Schulz’s autobiography in which he said the reason he went into cartooning is because he couldn’t do much else very well. That was the story of my life. If it is the story of yours, it is never to late to develop your sense of humor. Listen, read, learn, and have a leap of faith....and oh, and don’t be afraid to look foolish. They may just laugh at you yet.
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