Tuesday, February 24, 2009

Earl Scruggs jamming with The Byrds



From the 1969 tv special, "Earl Scruggs With Family and Friends." There's a cement pond in the background. It's so great to see Earl playing with Clarence White. White was the greatest bluegrass guitarist that ever lived in my humble opinion. But he had to make a living so he played country/rock with The Byrds. There would be no Tony Rice without Clarence. What an innovator he was. Did I spell innovator right?

Clarence is the short guy with the beard and the "puffy shirt." He doesn't get to stretch much on this clip but you can hear him using the "string bender" which he invented (along with Gene Parsons) near the end of You Ain't Going Nowhere. He was killed in 1973 by a drunk driver as he was loading his equipment up after a gig. What a loss.

We are what we eat, God help us


From Pat Oliphant, probably the greatest editorial cartoonist that ever lived.

A little late but here it is anyway





Since cartooning is my thing, I probably should post about this controversy. I should've jumped on this days ago when it first came to light. Now I see that Dave has it on his blog over at Dave's Fiction Warehouse and he's not even a cartoonist! I'm so dang lazy. In fact, I'm so lazy that I'm just going to copy Dave's posting and put it up here on my blog. Not just because I'm lazy. Also because he's a much better writer than I am.

Here's what Dave said:
So for three days running, a top story on all the news sites was the chimpanzee who ran amok and tore off somebody's face, and was then shot for his trouble. It was eclipsed only by the ongoing story about the federal stimulus package and its myriad shortcomings. So you'd think that when a cartoonist attempted to play off both headlines, the result would be polite yuks at best, bored shrugs at worst.

Then again, this is America, where Al Sharpton remains at large and the only thing we have more of than bad debt is sweet, sweet outrage. Sharpton was among the professionally aggrieved who looked at the cartoon Wednesday and perceived in it the specter of racism. The president of the National Association of Black Journalists, evidently unaware of the 24/7 coverage of the rogue chimp, saw a direct racial caricature of President Obama. A New York state senator saw a tacit endorsement of assassination and fond nod to the days of lynching. And those were the more moderate interpretations.

Look, I know I'm not black and therefore my opinion on this worth exactly nothing. But here's what I see: a cartoonist suggesting, none too subtly, that the stimulus bill is so imperfect it might as well have been authored by a crazed lesser primate. I don't need to point out that the authors include both houses of Congress as well as the president. As political criticism and satire, it's perfectly legitimate. Other presidents have fared much worse, and Obama probably will too.

Remember those Dutch cartoons about Muhammad, and how so many Muslims the world over went so laughably berserk? By rampaging over a caricature, they became caricatures themselves. It's probably too late for Sharpton, but the others tearing out their hair over a dumb cartoon should give that some thought.

(End of Dave quote)
Here's the comment which I posted on his blog:

"Dumb cartoon" is right. The old cartoonists' tradition of taking two unrelated news stories and tying them together can sometimes work, and God knows I've done it too many times to count (and it only sometimes worked for me). But this is just a dumb misfire. You don't use monkey images in cartoons about African-Americans. The wounds from decades of intentionally insulting racist "jokes" are too deep and, unfortunately, too fresh. Context matters and this cartoonist is guilty of overlooking that fact. He'd have to be crazy to have meant it as a racist attack. I think it was just a dumb stab at meeting a deadline. Now he's stuck with a gigantic sideshow that completely overshadows his original point. That is dumb because it's self-defeating

And I don't blame anyone for being outraged about a cartoon. Graphic images are powerful and this controversy is more proof of it. I just wish certain newspapers understood that when it comes time for layoffs!

What think you, gentle reader?

Wednesday, February 18, 2009

Sunday, February 15, 2009

One more reason to love bluegrass

Because these guys hate it!

Apparently this is a popular channel on the web. Who knew.


Sunday morning sacred image



Git outa bed an git to church! Deacon Possum says...

I wanta eat there


A great old photo for sale on Ebay. Dig that 1955 Buick on the right.

Buffalo Gal


Another drawing from my discontinued children's book project of years back based on the song Buffalo Gals. Buffalo Bonnie.

Friday, February 13, 2009

Thursday, February 12, 2009

Wheezing on bloodied knees



I think it's a measure of our state's dismal self-esteem and of our legislature's bankrupt imaginative abilities that we are still talking about building a coal plant in Kansas to benefit Colorado. As if that's all we have left to count on. As if the best we can hope for is to become an ash tray for other states. As if our residents don't deserve the same health considerations that those of other states deserve. This is pathetic desperation born out of a sense of wothlessness.

We can do better than sacrificing our environment and our health to the gods of economic development. You're not "economically developed" if you grovel on your knees to an industry, that industry tosses you $20 and you then have to spend $100 bandaging and caring for your skinned and bloodied knees.

Wednesday, February 11, 2009

The best laid plans of mice and buffalo gals



Years ago I put together a children's book on the song "Buffalo Gals" with high hopes of getting it published by some high-powered New York publishing house. Sent it off to the 8 biggest publishers and over the next 6 to 9 months received the steady trickle down of rejection notices, ususally without any personal comment or helpful criticism. Oh, well. I got a few good drawings out of the whole process. I like this guy.

Monday, February 9, 2009

Hey. Tooting your own horn is what blogs are all about, ain't it?




Well, it sure is around here.

In case you missed it, here's the Wichita Magazine profile of yours truly that came out last month.

The Firebrand
For two decades at The Wichita Eagle, Richard Crowson was the editorial cartoonist everyone loved to hate. But when he was fired in September, the outpouring of support made him rethink his legacy.
By DREW BRATCHER

On a Saturday afternoon in mid-October, Richard Crowson, the former cartoonist for The Wichita Eagle, strums a guitar in the café at Watermark Books alongside wife Karen. The song is “I Know My Baby Loves Me,” a barnburner by Ernest Tubb about the strange and misconstrued evidences of love. For the last verse, Crowson, who sings with a stolid backcountry lilt redolent of his Memphis roots, improvises: “Well, I used to work at the Eagle, then they put me out on the street, but I know my paper loves me. Yes I know my paper loves me in their own peculiar way.” Afterwards, the crowd of 30 or 40 that has gathered to hear the family band applauds, whistles. “I’m over it,” Crowson says breezily, swapping his guitar for a banjo, grinning. “I swear I am.”

For 21 years, Crowson, who was laid off in September, filled the Eagle’s opinion page with irreverent, ruthlessly local, socially charged cartoons engaged with the plight of the working poor, corporal punishment, the teaching of science in schools, environmental protection, women’s rights, the inferiority complex of Kansans, and legislative quackery.

He was the first of his kind at the Eagle—he talked an editor into creating the position in 1987—and he will likely be the last. The Eagle is the latest in a string of more than 50 dailies, from the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel to The Chicago Tribune, to replace salaried artists with cheaper, nationally syndicated cartoons.

Crowson’s satirical renderings of Kansas politicos, from district attorney Nola Foulston as a stoical Egyptian sphinx to senator Bob Dole as a black-eyed, bruise-kneed Dennis the Menace, won him a loyal audience who never hesitated to express their outrage in letters and e-mails. In one note, a reader wrote, “Your mother should have aborted you.”

Crowson told me, “It took me years to get used to that kind of criticism. Then, after a while, it becomes a badge of honor to an editorial cartoonist because you figure you’re not really doing your job if you’re not hacking people off and getting them cussing. You’re supposed to be putting your opinion out there clearly.” Which is why the hundreds of positive e-mails that Crowson received in the days after September 28th, when his final cartoon ran in the Eagle, confounded the 56-year-old. “You can get cynical in this business easily and most of us are, and I still am to some extent, about human nature,” Crowson said. “Then something meaningful like that happens.”

In disposition, Crowson is an unlikely firebrand. At his brick house in Rockwood a few months ago, as orange hemlock leaves swirled around a blue “Obama 2008” sign in the front yard, the artist was inconsolable. For days, to the surprise of Karen, he had been answering fan mail, but his computer had crashed, and he had lost the e-mails. Crowson had been touched by the consolations and was worried that his well wishers would think him ungrateful and rude for not writing back. “It just killed me,” he said.

Crowson is short, boyishly thin, with a ruddy complexion, and wispy blond hair graying above the ears. In the film version of his life, he might be played by William H. Macy. Crowson speaks in soft, sincere timbres with a dawdling cadence that quickens when he tells stories. He often animates his tales, such as the one about former editorial page editor George Neavoll calling him into his office one early morning, with cartoon flourishes. “I was expecting the worst,” Crowson said about the incident, “but I go back there, and he pulls back the drapes and says, ‘Have you ever seen a more beautiful sunrise in your life?’ My first thought was, ‘Whew!’ I’m telling you, a gigantic uppercase ‘WHEW’ flashed over my head.”

Born in Memphis in 1952, Crowson was raised in the churning gyre of the segregated South, on a poor white block one street removed from the blacks. His mother, a homemaker with an 8th-grade education, had childhood memories of the Great Depression, of a banker pulling up to her family’s northern Mississippi farm in a Model T to repossess the property. Crowson’s father was a third-generation Methodist preacher who pulled a second job as a bookkeeper at Memphis’ Hospital for Crippled Adults, then as a postman in the dead letter department. He preached fiery sermons, told wild bedtime stories, thought Elvis Presley was the devil’s henchman, encouraged Crowson to read the classics, but hit the roof when his son brought home Harper Lee’s To Kill a Mockingbird, a novel that challenged racial inequality in the South.

When Crowson was 14, his father hit a black boy with his car on the way home from work one day. The child was rushed to the hospital and was released without any injuries, but Crowson’s father was devastated by the event. He sat in the den with his head in his hands, sobbing. The scene confused Crowson, who could not reconcile his father’s racism with such a penitent response. “When you’re young, and your parents are loving towards you, and yet they have some attitude like that,” Crowson said. “It’s really confusing when you grow up and start questioning it.”

In his own quiet way, Crowson rebelled. In church, he sketched elaborate crucifixion scenes with a red color pencil to escape the drone of hellfire-and-brimstone sermons. He devoured Hot Rod magazine each month, flipping eagerly to the inside back cover, a full-page advertisement for Big Daddy Roth T-shirts of cartoon monsters in shiny muscle cars. Around his parents, the eighth-grader strummed folk songs on the guitar they bought him for Christmas. When they left, he rocked out in front of the mirror to the Beatles and Elvis, whose music was the air that teenagers in Memphis breathed.

Crowson’s cartooning career began in ninth grade with an inauspicious drawing about school spirit in the high-school rag. Later, in college at Memphis State University (now the University of Memphis), his cartoons turned polemical. With newfound artistic freedom, Crowson drew cartoons of the school president and Tennessee governor Ray Blanton, whom Crowson says, “had a great nose,” a fitting trait to accentuate on a politician who later did jail time for selling liquor licenses. On a lark, Crowson submitted his cartoons to the Jackson Sun, a paper east of Memphis, with a cover letter that asked a question: “Wouldn’t it be great to have your own cartoonist who could draw your local politicians?”

In the late ’70s, editorial cartooning was in its heyday. Artists such as Paul Conrad of the Los Angeles Times, Pat Oliphant of the Denver Post, and Herb Block of the Washington Post had produced iconic work that captured the nation’s outrage at the Vietnam War and Watergate. As newspaper circulations swelled, more papers added full-time cartoonists. The Sun hired Crowson in 1979, and the 23-year-old was thrust into the center of a buzzing newsroom with police scanners blaring in the background, Teletype machines clacking away, reporters peering over his shoulder.


In those days, Tennessee was a state reckoning with school desegregation, unregulated hazardous waste sites, corrupt liquor lobbyists, and a cast of politicians destined for national office. Crowson drew Democrat Al Gore, then a nascent Tennessee state congressman, as a frightened owl, and took on flannel-shirt wearing Republican Lamar Alexander, now a U.S. senator, for his gubernatorial efforts at school reform. He was a liberal stamping on conservative soil, and the reaction was fierce. In response to a cartoon about the mayor of Jackson, Crowson got a letter from the mayor’s wife expressing how Crowson had made their daughter cry and calling on him to apologize.

In 1985, Crowson moved to Wichita at the urging of an editor friend. He started as an illustrator for the Eagle, adding graphics to news stories, but talked editor Davis Merritt into creating a cartoonist position two years later. As he had in Jackson, Crowson found a testy audience for his cartoons. “In both places, it was jolting for people to all of the sudden see cartoons about their community,” he said. No one in the limelight was exempt, and no belief was too sacred to nudge. In caricatures, he chronicled New York financier Ronald Perelman’s hostile takeover of Wichita-based Coleman lantern company, Sam Brownback’s strivings to fill Bob Dole’s shoes in the Senate, the school board’s dizzying decisions to pair the teaching of evolution with intelligent design, and Kansas’s contentment to be, according to Crowson, “the punch line state” for late-night comedians.

But there was a more endearing side, too. Following disasters such as Hurricane Katrina and the Greensburg tornado, Crowson created harrowing cartoons about the dignity of everyday people in the face of tragedy. He drew elegiac evocations of departed icons such as Francis Bavier, who played Aunt Bee on The Andy Griffith Show. In 2002, when his dog Al died, Crowson made the wirehaired fox terrier—who had first appeared in cartoon form in Crowson’s crusade against Kansas puppy mills—a permanent fixture in his art. “As for Al, I’ve decided that he will live on in my cartoons,” Crowson wrote in an accompanying column. “His tail still has some wagging to do.”

Crowson learned of his layoff during the Winfield Bluegrass Festival, where he was scheduled to perform before heavy rains and flooding ended the celebration. For years, Crowson had read about editorial cartoonists—many of them his heroes—losing their jobs. In the mid-’80s, there were around 200 salaried cartoonists at American newspapers. By the early aughts, the number had slipped below 90, according to a Nieman Foundation report. In the past three years, another 29 editorial cartoonists have been fired, accepted buy-outs, or—like John Sherffius at the St. Louis Post-Dispatch—have resigned over pressures to make their cartoons more politically correct. As more people get news from cable TV and online, publishers have tightened strings. “And who’s more expendable than the ink-stained wretch hunched over in the corner drawing silly pictures,” wrote cartoonist J.P. Trostle of The Chapel Hill Herald in his article “The Evaporating Editorial Cartoonist.”

Crowson cleaned out his corner office at the Eagle when he returned from Winfield. At home, he flipped through stacks of old cartoons—some of which had been reproduced in The New York Times, Newsweek, and Time—like an author re-reading forgotten sentences. “I just cringe now when I look at some of these,” he said. “I see things I wished I would have done differently.” In the following days, Crowson gathered friends around him and leaned on his family and his pastor at Calvary United Methodist church for spiritual advice. He has begun to see the disappointment as a blessing in disguise, an opportunity to focus on the things he has wanted to do for years such as sharing his passion for music and art with students and playing more gigs at local haunts.

If you met Crowson at a bar, he would probably describe himself as “a banjo player who draws cartoons,” rather than the other way around. Crowson began playing with Karen in the late ’80s. They had good harmony; he enjoyed playing banjo to her rhythm guitar. Both got divorced, and a year and a half later, they married. Their 14-year-old daughter, Haley, plays the violin, and they occasionally wrangle her into playing the fiddle on stage with them. Karen, who is a third-grade teacher at Price-Harris Elementary, is fond of reminding Haley that it could be worse: “She could have been born into a circus family. We could be making her get up on a trapeze or walk a high wire.”

The Crowsons’ songs run the gamut, from dulcet covers of “Blue Moon of Kentucky” to roaring originals with cartoon-worthy lyrics about the local school board. They have opened for big-name bluegrass acts such as Allison Krauss and have performed on the soundtrack to the History channel’s documentary The Wild West. Crowson also plays in Pop and the Boys, a jamband, The Home Rangers, a cowboy quartet, and Squaresville, a tribute band to his guilty pleasure, ’50s crooner Perry Como, whose record covers adorn Crowson’s living-room walls. To Crowson, playing music is a spiritual experience, his ethereal way of connecting to the faith of his parents and grandparents. “There are a lot of those old songs that I have a hard time not getting embarrassingly misty-eyed when I’m singing them,” Crowson said, “I can’t get very far away from the fact that family were all preachers.”

At the Watermark concert in October, Crowson played “Check Your Baggage on God’s Airline,” a tune about persevering in tough times. “This next one is a gospel song,” he told the crowd. “Liberals can write gospel songs, too.” Outside, the fall trees were burning. A smattering of latecomers straggled in, blowing warmth into cold hands. “Some people tote an awful heavy load,” Crowson yowled, picking his banjo. “They carry that baggage around until they’re dead, when they could’ve been dancing to the song of life instead.”

My first tv spot!



This is the ad which KAKE and Trees for Life produced from my cartoons for our Love in Your Attic campaign. They just took my drawings and sort of animated them a little.

Friday, February 6, 2009

They're b-a-a-a-c-k!


Here's a flashback toon about our coal-hearted legislature. They're still trying to pump pollutants into our air so Colorado can have more energy. Idiocy.

Tuesday, February 3, 2009

Makes you wanta pour maple syrup on the sky




Old pal Dan Rouser called to say he just got out of the dentist office, looked up and saw the clouds forming a cool waffle pattern up in the heavens. He thought I might want to blog about it. Three things I love about this situation: One -- I love having the kind of blog that people think I might like to post about the cool clouds on. Two -- I love the cool clouds. Three -- I love having friends who call to tell me about them.

Because I was driving my daughter to violin lessons I couldn't get a photo. But I looked up and, by golly, there were waffle clouds in the sky! Hope you saw 'em too. I love Kansas.

I didn't get a chance to ask Dan if there was a nitrous oxide factor involved...

What a wild and Scruggsy guy!




Good friend Tim Quigley sent a link to this story in the NY Times about Steve Martin and his love for the banjo and his newly invigorated career as a banjo player (way to go where the big money is, Steve!)and his new album of bluegrass songs called The Crow. Personally I think he should have called it the Crow-son, but whatever. It's a good read. Check it out before the NY Times folds. Link

Monday, February 2, 2009

Maybe it's the chair...




I don't know. But something has been making me reluctant to sit down here and plug in new blog entries. I have a lower back problem and this chair definitely sucks. Always makes it hurt more. But you know what? I don't think the chair is the problem.

Couldn't have been the way I was raised. My folks instilled a work ethic in me that to this day pumps a continuous flow of guilt through my system that would rival any I.V. at Via Christi. Especially what with getting laid off and everything. And I've already droned on ad nauseam about how bizarre this whole blogging thing is to me, what with the presumption that what I have to say is post-worthy at all. I don't think any of those things are the cause of my blogstipation (Hey! I coined a new word!)

So I look at a lot of other blogs. Some of them make me feel even less capable. My former colleague Dave Knadler has a killer blog, no pun intended (he writes crime fiction). Every time I read one of his posts I feel like the proverbial monkey at the keyboard, minus the Shakespeare which is the other half of that old chestnut.Here's a link to Dave's Fiction Warehouse. Read some of his older posts. Beautifully worded. Then there's another former colleague, Suzanne Tobias, whose blog, Notes for My Kids' Therapist is terrific. She's a smart, almost Erma Bombeck-ish, for those of you old enough to remember her column, writer.

Uh. My fingers are going limp at the very thought of ever trying to post interesting blog items in the styles of those folks.

Then again, I'm not a writer. Maybe I should forgive myself and just post whatever comes into my cartoony noggin. I'll try that a while. Brace yourself.

Wichidog in the hat


Been drawing up the March Wichita Magazine cartoon, a feature all about our prairie dog town and called Wichidog Town. Here's a smidgeon of next month's adventures.