PRIDE!
This past Friday I was on a Zoom panel with fellow Comics Kingdom cartoonists Bianca Xunise and Olive Brinker to talk about being queer and being cartoonists. Our audience was a group of LGBTQ folk who work for the Hearst Corporation. (Comics Kingdom, run by King Features Syndicate, is one of their ventures.) One member of the group asked in advance how readers responded when we did comics that incorporated LGBTQ themes.
…So I made a comic to share with them about my most recent experience.
When Rhymes With Orange got syndicated by King Features in 1995, we were in pre-Ellen Degeneres times. School teachers were getting fired if they came out. Having just landed my first big job, I was spooked.
I was out to family and friends, but not professionally. I think my editor knew, and I knew he knew, and he probably knew I knew that he knew. But such were the gay contortions of the 90s.
As a single panel strip, Rhymes With Orange works differently than a comic strip with characters. Since there are no known personalities, and it is something new each day, single panel artists rely on a cultural shorthand.
What that means is that if a reader sees a man and a woman on the page, before even reading the word balloon, they just know it will be a relationship joke. If there are two people of the same sex, they know it is a buddy joke. It is the air we breath.
So when my then-girlfriend said to me, “I realize that the things you do are not done for the sole purpose of annoying me,” I couldn’t be mad— she had just given me a great line for a cartoon! But for it to translate to a general audience, I drew a man and a woman talking.
As I struggled with this disconnect, I came up with some workarounds. Here are some snippets.
Don't show the bodies.
Keep the love interest off screen. Use non-gendered words like “Cutie.”
Draw monsters instead of people.
And guess what? Queer readers caught on, because these were signals, and gay people were well-versed in this coded language. They reached out to me on their AOL accounts. “Psst…Are you gay?” I came out to these folks five years before I came out to my editor.
This next strip has been one of my most popular because so many couples (straight, gay and everyone in between) can see themselves.
I HAVE NO PRIDE!
I’m switching topics now to something else I’m actively trying to figure out. This past March, the Washington Post did an article about how comics drawn by women are disappearing from America’s comics pages. Appearing in fewer papers means less money for the same amount of work. It’s been a doozy of a year for Rhymes With Orange, and not in a good way.
Younger female cartoonists like Georgia Dunn, of Breaking Cat News, turned to Patreon to make up for the massive losses. I talked about that possibility with Rina Piccolo (my collaborator now on Rhymes With Orange), but Rina pointed out that there’s not certainty in income for the extra work involved, so she is doing freelance projects to try make up the gap.
About three months ago, Comics Kingdom, where Rhymes With Orange posts daily, started a new thing. Readers can support a single strip for $2.99 a month, and get today’s comic emailed every morning. Of that $3, Comics Kingdom takes half and we get the other $1.50 to split.
Comics Kingdom has always had a subscription to all the comics for $4.99 a month, but it’s not as good a deal for the artists, because Comics Kingdom takes half, then the rest is split among the stable of cartoonists.
So if you’d like to support us, please Subscribe to Rhymes With Orange on ComicsKingdom.com!
THANK YOU!
FASHION FORWARD, AND BACKWARD
Here’s a new direction for Rhymes With Orange pajama pants… Prom dress!
This is the brain child of fashion designer Lila Pearl, age 9 and 3/4ths. Lookin’ good, Lila!
There are more prom outfits (aka Cat Pajama Pants) at the Rhymes With Orange Online Store.
NEXT STOP, VERMONT!
By the time you read this, I will have started teaching my one week single panel cartooning intensive at The Center For Cartoon Studies in White River Junction, Vermont! You missed this year’s class, but I teach there every June. It’s a blast!
Thanks for reading! And thanks for your support for Rhymes With Orange!
xo,
Hilary
Sue- thank you so much! It really means a lot. It’s challenging to change models on how to make a living!
Bravo.