2007 was an incredibly busy year with great new work from veteran and newcomer creators; more webcomics gaining larger audiences both online and in print; major new business initiatives; significant updates to useful tools for webcomics; and all things, considered a minimum of drama.
In the first third of the year, we saw the end of Bitpass, arguably the most publicized of the micropayments systems. We had a major controversy when it was discovered that t-shirt and artwork from Todd Goldman had a more than striking similarity to a webcomic by Dave Kelly. We also had the first live presentation of the WCCAs at Megacon.
JANUARY
- PERSONAL: Former ComixTalk contributers Eric "Websnark" Burns and Wednesday White get engaged. (T Cambbell interviewed the pair in April; here's a link to an MP3 files of the interview.)
- HISTORY: We give into nostalgia one more time and take a look back at the Big Panda-era of webcomics with comments from a long list of creators, including Chris Crosby and Darren "Gav" Bleuel, John Allison, Eight, John Robey, Josh Lesnick, David Willis and more.
- WIKI WATCH: Terrence Marks listed the roll of the deleted from Wikipedia. In February, Wikipedia considered deleting the entry for the Webcomic Creators' Choice Awards (WCCAs). Roughly twelve months later ComixTalk actually got an entry at Wikipedia. Maybe we'll see a little more balance and a more positive approach from Wikipedia to how it handles its deletion process. (Related wiki webcomic funnies: Irregular Webcomic, xkcd, Questionable Content)
- BUSINESS: Krishna M. Sadasivam begins auctioning off guest appearances in his webcomic PC Weenies.
- BUSINESS: The micropayments system Bitpass closed up shop.
- WEBCOMICS: David Morgan-Mar of Irregular Webcomic announces a new "open-sourced" webcomic that later adopts the name of Infinity On 30 Credits A Day.
- AWARDS: This year the schedule for the WCCAs shifted and we interviewed WCCA Chairman Mark Mekkes about the changes. The award nominees were selected in January to recognize work in 2006. The winners were announced in February. This was the first year the awards were presented in person -- the ceremony was held at Megacon. The Gigcast recorded the event for posterity.
- AWARDS: Gene Yang won the Michael L. Printz Award from the American Library Association for excellence in literature for young adults for his graphic novel, American Born Chinese.
- COLLECTIVES: Lunchbox Funnies is an all-ages comics collective. There's a blog post from co-founder Tyler Martin here and a bit in our interview with him.
- PODCASTS: The creators of three movie-themed webcomics (Tom Brazelton, Gordon McAlpin and Joe Dunn) get together for a weekly podcast called The Triple Feature.
FEBRUARY
MARCH
APRIL
- LEGAL: T-shirt guy Todd Goldman looks like he has plagerized a Dave Kelly webcomic and Dave Kelly notices it. Online news sites and forums pick apart more of Todd Goldman t-shirt line. Goldman lawyers fire off cease and desist letters, including one to FLEEN. Journalista! had a good round-up of all of this (and Cartoon Brew does as well).
- LEGAL: The creator of Shonen Punk, accused a small-press manga publisher of re-publishing his webcomic in print without acquiring permission or providing compensation.
- BUSINESS: Comicspace adds support for creators to sell their artwork through the site.
- BUSINESS:Square Enix hires Scott Ransoomair, the creator of VG Cats, to create the official webcomic, Adventure Log, for the Final Fantasy XI MMORPG .
- BUSINESS: One positive development from the closing of the micropayments system Bitpass was Scott McCloud's decision to publish online his The Right Number webcomic for free. Now that McCloud is done driving around the United States, maybe he'll be able to finish this work.
- BUSINESS: Steven L. Cloud is the second Dumbrella member (after R. Stevens with Diesel Sweeties) to sign a syndication deal with United Media. The most immediate changes are that Cloud moved his webcomic Boy On A Stick and Slither to Comics.com and reformatted it to fit the standard newspaper format. The Webcomics In Print blog also interviewed Cloud about this move.
- MILESTONES: Mitch Clem, the creator of webcomics such as Nothing Nice to Say; Coffee Achievers and San Antonio Rock City writes about his five years making webcomics.
- MILESTONES: An interview with Ronson, who has published his webcomic The Gods of Arr-Kelaan on DrunkDuck (and been associated with that site) since 2003.
- AWARDS: The nominations for the Eisner Awards are released with six webcomics up for Best Digital Comic. In July, at the ceremony at Comicon, Sam and Max, by Steve Purcell won for Best Digital Comic.
- DEAD TREES: Steven Withrow and Alexander Danner's new book Character Design for Graphic Novels is out.
- DEAD TREES: The Flight anthology series rolls on; Newsarama has a giant preview of the now available Flight 4.
- DEAD TREES: The Daily Crosshatch has a review of James Kochalka's second big collection of his webcomic American Elf (vol. 2). (I reviewed the first collected volume for ComixTalk's November 2004 issue.)
- HYPE: David Willis uses his webcomic Shortpacked! to do a hilarious parody of the popular newspaper comic strip Funky Winkerbean. In July, he adds a spot-on parody of For Better Or For Worse.
- HYPE: One of the best recent break-out webcomic hits is Breakfast of the Gods by Brendan Douglas Jones. Mike Russell did a full-color comic interview with Jones (the full-length, non-illustrated version of the interview is here).
- TOOLS: Brad Hawkins released stripShow, his webcomic "add-on" for Wordpress.
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