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	<title>Londons Times Cartoons Blog &#187; midwest tornadoes</title>
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		<title>Given Our Planet&#8217;s Situation, Can  A Cartoonist Always Be Funny? By Rick London</title>
		<link>http://londonstimes.us/blog/?p=162</link>
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		<pubDate>Sat, 28 May 2011 02:00:18 +0000</pubDate>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://londonstimes.us/blog/?p=162</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<div class="addthis_toolbox addthis_default_style " addthis:url='http://londonstimes.us/blog/?p=162' addthis:title='Given Our Planet&#8217;s Situation, Can  A Cartoonist Always Be Funny? By Rick London'  ><a class="addthis_button_facebook_like" fb:like:layout="button_count"></a><a class="addthis_button_tweet"></a><a class="addthis_counter addthis_pill_style"></a></div>I have been co-creating Londons Times Cartoons, the Google #1 ranked offbeat webcomics on the Internet, with my team for over 14 years.  We&#8217;ve created 5000+ cartoons and over 1/4 million funny gifts &#38; collectibles; many carried by Amazon, Sears, and other established firms.  Again, I&#8217;m proud. A few weeks ago, an old childhood friend [...]<div class="addthis_toolbox addthis_default_style addthis_32x32_style" addthis:url='http://londonstimes.us/blog/?p=162' addthis:title='Given Our Planet&#8217;s Situation, Can  A Cartoonist Always Be Funny? By Rick London' ><a class="addthis_button_preferred_1"></a><a class="addthis_button_preferred_2"></a><a class="addthis_button_preferred_3"></a><a class="addthis_button_preferred_4"></a><a class="addthis_button_compact"></a></div>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I have been co-creating Londons Times Cartoons, the Google #1 ranked offbeat <a href="http://www.londonstimes.us">webcomics</a> on the Internet, with my team for over 14 years.  We&#8217;ve created 5000+  cartoons and over 1/4 million <a href="http://www.ricklondonshops.com">funny gifts </a>&amp; collectibles; many  carried by Amazon, Sears, and other established firms.  Again, I&#8217;m  proud.</p>
<p>A few weeks ago, an old childhood friend asked me how I can always &#8220;be funny&#8221; &amp; added &#8220;You are #1 on the Internet.  You live on a ridgetop mountain paradise. Do you ever feel empathy or sadness?  There are different types of humor and though it all &#8220;comes  from the same place, different events or visuals might trigger it. Do I feel sadness and/or anger or grief.  Of course and often lately with all the world tragedies. Just because we are somewhat buffered does not mean we don&#8217;t care what happens in our world.  What happens five thousand miles away, affects us. We all now live in a global village called &#8220;earth&#8221;.</p>
<p>At first I thought back to the BP Oil disaster in the Gulf Of  Mexico. I grew up on that Gulf and it was magic to me as a child even up  into young adulthood.  I loved everything about it. I swam there,  fished there, skied there, flirted with girls there, ran with my dogs  there. It was my life in many ways. In the blink of an eye it was  destroyed, and though the oil is out of sight, out of mind, we all know  things are not okay but a lot of chemicals; oil and dispersants have  sunk to the bottom or halfway down.  Baby porpoises are floating to the  beach. Sperm whales are nowhere to be found.  I created a Tony Hayward <a href="http://londonstimes.us/toons/cartoons/display.html?image=DSulivanBPOilIWantMyLifeBack.jpg"> BP cartoon</a> which has become popular.</p>
<p>I had been thinking about starting Londons Times Generation Two <a href="http://londonstimes.us/">Offbeat Cartoons</a>, and<a href="http://www.ricklondoncollection.com"> funny gifts</a>,  but the oil spill was the only thing on my mind.  So I made a pledge to  write a parody song regarding the oil spill every day until it was  plugged; and I did. If I could have found a band to record them, the  funds were to go to various Gulf animal and environmental causes.   Sadly, I was unable to recruit a band on spec who could do song  parodies. But I was able to purge, in a jaded sarcastic way, humor, as  angry as I was. Anyone who knows Lee knows how angry I was, and I could  not shake it. The songwriting helped.  Posting them on my popular  well-visited blog helped even more.</p>
<p>Then I mellowed out a bit after a number of nature hikes with  Lee and though I never forgot the event, and never will (both of us have  pledged never to buy gas or other BP-owned products), we have in our  own way, moved past it.  Lee is from Oregon and has never seen the Gulf  and all its natural beauty.</p>
<p>Then came the uprising in the Arab world. Though I occasionally do socio-<a href="http://londonstimes.us/toons/toonindex.html">political cartoons</a>,  it is not the norm. Most are offbeat in the spirit of, some critics  have said, The Far Side, which I consider a compliment, though my goal  from the start was to attempt to continue Gary Larson&#8217;s absurd spirit,  but create it with less text and a more &#8220;fine-art&#8221; look. For the most  part, that has worked out fine.</p>
<p>So I decided to create ideas about the dictators which is always  fun. It gives one a chance to be iconoclastic without hurting anyone  but lampoon those who has not hurt many others.  A few of the cartoons  landed in a major newspaper in the Middle East and though I find nothing  about nations in turmoil funny, again, I was able to find comedy in  fear and anger and it happened.</p>
<p>Finally, there was the tsunami and nuclear disaster in Japan and  a lying company called Tepco.   I can&#8217;t explain how much it felt like  watching the oil leak from Deep Horizon and Tony Hayward saying things  weren&#8217;t so bad, and when busted by the media added, &#8220;I just want my life  back&#8221;.  It reminded me of Yogi Berra&#8217;s great quote &#8220;Just like deja vu  all over again&#8221;.   Now the citizens of Japan, one of our greatest allies  if not our greatest, and good friend, was being destroyed, first by a  natural disaster, which I know from Katrina can eventually be fixed, but  then by a firm &#8220;Tepco&#8221; which seemed to play the game exactly like BP.   The sad thing is that the Japanese media seemed to go along with it;  basically reading Tepco&#8217;s press releases as news, until evidence began  showing what was being released as news, was not what was really  happening.  Radiation was leaking everywhere.  Tepco was insisting it  was not so bad.</p>
<p>Meanwhile radiation was covering the planet and it has now been  found in nearly every country on the planet. It will go down in history  as worse than Chernobyl.  My team created a two-headed<a href="http://londonstimes.us/toons/cartoons/display.html?image=DSullivanJapan2Headedfrog2.jpg"> frog cartoon </a>lounging by the leaking plant reading a newspaper. The headlines read,  &#8220;Nuclear Accident Safe, No Worries&#8221;. One frog head says to the other,  &#8220;Looks like the media is telling us the truth. Nothing to worry about&#8221;.</p>
<p>Some mistook my jaded reaction to making fun of the event.  It  was anything but that.  It was a message to Tepco and the complicit  media that they have no right to hide the truth from their citizens (any  more than BP had a right to do all they could to hide their disaster  from us).    Again, there was nothing funny about this event, and it  felt like BP was happening to them this time.  I was enraged.  But from  that rage I was able to find a bit of humor. It was angry humor but  humor nevertheless.</p>
<p>Then came the flurry of tornados. One hit our hometown of Hot  Springs about 7.8 miles from us and we lost some of our Arkansas  citizens.  This was a very sad time and even out of anger or fear, I  found nothing funny, so I just stared at the news and went on hikes when  I had the energy. I created a few items, but no cartoons.  It was a  time of grief as the warnings kept coming and tornados were hitting  ground and destroying cities and killing people and other living  creatures.  I was too sad to get much done, but I allowed myself to be  that sad.  Lee understood as she too was sad.</p>
<p>Neither of us had ever experienced anything like it, and I grew  up outside of New   Orleans, tornado and hurricane alley and went  through the worst of them. It had been a way of life growing up. Now  with global warming and climate changes, the tornado behavior was/is  too.  All I knew is we were lucky to be surrounded my mountains, and  though there is always a slight chance of one landing inside such a  geographic area, it is very rare.  That did not take away the sadness I  felt and still feel watching the people hit in Kansas, Alabama, Mo, etc  try to pick up and put their lives back together.  No way to create  cartoons (or much of anything) when you know people are experiencing  such a tragedy.</p>
<p>I don&#8217;t enjoy creating cartoons out of fear or anger. To me,  they are not as funny nor do they have the same feel of professionalism  as do those that come out of my head when the world feels a bit stable  and I am hiking/communing with nature.</p>
<p>So I founded Rick London Designs which include Sushi Wear (I kid  you not) and love quote gifts (again no joke).  I don&#8217;t have to feel  funny to create these gifts and collectibles.  I love sushi and I love  shoes, so I make shoeshies<a href="http://www.zazzle.com/shoeshies/shoes"> (sushi shoes) </a> at my ShoeShies.com. These are fun creation, but I don&#8217;t have to &#8220;be funny&#8221; to create them, yet I have a wonderful outlet.</p>
<p>The<a href="http://www.shoesthatamuse.com"> love quote</a> gifts and sushi items also just got picked up by our main manufacturer  who is not a traditional POD but a private organization who chooses  talent they want (creators cannot simply sign up with them), which means  they are already beginning to show at Amazon and should soon be at  Sears online and other outlets. Some of the <a href="http://www.shoeshies.com">sushi gifts</a> at Amazon can be seen here.  The famous<a href="http://www.shoesthatamuse.com"> love quote gifts</a> on Amazon can be seen here.</p>
<p>This makes me not feel angry, but that life is good.  And it  is.  The world is a good world.  We live in a very good place.  Lee and I  get to create for a living and she gets to hike and take photos and  design products. I get to design products and think up cartoons and make  gifts that make people laugh.  I can&#8217;t think of anything for which we  would trade our lifestyle.  And as you can see, we still are a part of  the world, feel sadness, happiness and all the other emotions persons in  Metropolis feel.</p>
<p>&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;-</p>
<p>Rick London says he&#8217;s a semi-pro blogger, a<a href="http://www.shoeshies.com"> designer </a>of sorts, a <a href="http://www.londonstimes.us">cartoonist</a> who doesn&#8217;t draw well, and a professional twitterer who doesn&#8217;t like  social media all that much.  He and his wife Lee enjoy hiking, outdoors,  nature and wildlife and they live in the heart of the gorgeous Ouachita  Mountains of Arkansas.  Lee is a professional wildlife and<a href="http://www.hikeourplanet.com"> nature photographer </a>who runs the popular blog HikeOurPlanet.com. She designs beautiful designer shoes, gifts, clothing and home decor at her Lee Hiller Designs <a href="http://www.leehillerdesigns.com">Gift Shop</a>.</p>
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