HAACK
The President Dog saga continues! Come back on Friday for the finale, as well as our traditional Q and A feature. (If you've got a question you'd like me to answer, pop it in an email with "Q and A" in the subject line!) Then next week, it's time to return to some of the rest of the S&F crew for some spooky antics.
Meanwhile, my tackling of the Inktober daily drawing challenge continues! All 24 of the drawings I've done so far can be seen on my Instragram, Twitter, or Tumblr. And the drawings for the remaining days will pop up there as I finish 'em! There's a lot of fun stuff... fan art, doggos, S&F pals, and even a couple pin-ups that make careful/stupid use of prop stationery. Enjoy!
Follow me on: Instragram, Twitter, or Tumblr to see all my Inktober pieces! (And other stuff.)
-Sam Logan
President Dog
While I'm busy ramping up for our next Sam and Fuzzy arc, we take a brief sidestep this week to revisit the President Dog saga!
When we last left President Dog, he had lost the election to Candidate Cat and then disappeared. But you can find links to all his previous appearances right here. There are nine in total, and they're all timeless classics. (According to President Dog himself, anyway.)
We return on Wednesday with our next comic. See you then!
-Sam Logan
PS: I would probably be exceptionally bad at my job if I did not take a moment to remind you about the continued existense of the Vote Dog T-shirt, which is available, as always, in my Topatoco store.
Sam and Fuzzy Q & A: Toaster Edition
Got a question you want answered? Just drop me an email with "Q & A" in the subject line!
"I was browsing through the archives and found a strange similarity. Was Mr. Ackerman actually married to Jess Star? Here's Mr. Ackerman pulling out a picture of his wife for Lance, only it is a picture of a toaster . He just says that the original picture was destroyed, he never said that the toaster wasn't his wife. And of course we know that Jess has been a toaster before. Or a more disturbing question: is Mr. Ackerman actually Mr. Sin? And the most disturbing: if it is just unrelated, what is with you and toasters?" -Mark
I guess we've secretly uncovered the truth... I'm the one with a toaster fetish. (Or at least, a fetish for toaster-based punchlines.)
In seriousness, though, Jess Star's "sexy toaster" act is something she invented for Mr. Sin. I doubt she had ever done it before. Jess doesn't have any particular fondness for toasters. Just me, apparently.
"One thing I greatly admire about your work is the number and quality of the dramatic character reveals throughout the comic's history; moments when a person's true identity or previously unseen involvement in an arc are impressively brought to light. It is a device that you have implemented extremely well throughout the years, from big, shocking revelations like these to innumerable smaller (though not less important) ones. My question is: do you have a particular favorite reveal from Sam&Fuzzy's history, either for the satisfaction of finally letting out a secret you've been building up to, or because it allowed for a good character moment or visual, or just because it was really fun?" -Dawson
I still really love the "Crush is Sam" reveal. I'm particularly fond of it because it's an example of something that would only work in comics -- that particular twist only functions because of the specific information comics do and don't give you. Without simplified, cartoony art, it would have been immediately clear Sam and Crush were the same "actor"... I couldn't hide that by throwing in other characters with identical big cartoony square noses. I could in an animated cartoon, but then it would have been clear they had the same voice. And in a novel, I could have the hidden identity plot but I obviously I couldn't have a reveal scene that was driven entirely by visuals.
Comics are cool!
"I know that this is spoiler territory and will not truly be answered but I just wanted to throw the question out there. Once Sam and Fuzzy’s stories conclude, will the Committee’s sacred status quo still be maintained or will the world’s most carefully guarded secret(s) be revealed to all—with all the fallout that such a change will inescapably entail?
I.e. Will it be Rexford’s or Sam's philosophy that prevails?
(I can just imagine Keller & company attempting an impromptu public relations campaign to the effect of, “Yes, obviously the whole world has always been secretly controlled maternally guided by an underground oligarchy totally real nice guys.”)" -Claire
You are 100% correct! I totally can't answer that. But hey, here's a picture of a bunny.
We return on Monday with our next comic. See you then!
-Sam Logan