×

Cartoons

Grand Lake Visitor Magazine

http://www.grandlakevisitor.com

The Grand Lake Visitor Magazine is a publication of the Terry G. Hembree Family Trust. We are committed to being the most innovative and efficient and locally owned free publication in the Grand Lake O' The Cherokees area. We are dedicated to providing complete and reliable delivery of everything you need to know about the entire Grand Lake O' The Cherokees area, exceding the expectation of our readers, advertisers and supporters. We measure our achievements by exceptional customer and reader satisfaction, respect within our industry, the community, personal and professional growth of our publications and numerous Nationwide awards. We are committed to continue the stand for our Civil Rights as well as yours under the United States Constitution, and our First Amendment Rights prohibiting the free exercise thereof, or abridging the freedom of speech, or freedom of the press.

  • 12/8/2013
  • 14
  • 0

Dixie Fun Dance Theatre

http://www.dixiefundance.com

Dixie Fun Dance Theatre creates innovative dances that are reminiscent of pop art, political cartoons and expressionist painting all combined and expressed physically. DFDT's choreographic process begins in the library. Consequently, the movement is never for movement's sake only. Instead, each step and every line directly reflects the specific ideas and imagery generated by the research. DFDT's style is eclectic because any style or genre of movement might be incorporated into a dance, whatever is most compelling in terms of exploring the subject matter. For example, in The Thinnest Woman with the Fewest Wrinkles Wins, the movement styles range from campy, Broadway dancing to erotic jazz to thrashing, jarring modern movement to pedestrian, physical theatre. The overall structure of each dance is also a reflection of the topic. For instance, The Thinnest Woman ... involves multi-generational community members in order to broaden our idea of female beauty. Web is highly interactive because that dance is about the interconnectedness of all things. http://www.media-verse.com, a dance concerned with mass media and technology, is packaged into short bits that abruptly shift from one to the next, much like watching television. And The Money Show will begin with an auction to buy seats for the performance. The company has created 14 dance/theatre works: The Money Show, Web, http://www.media-verse.com, The Thinnest Woman with the Fewest Wrinkles Wins, The Thinnest Woman Wins, Nude Solo #73, Time-Warp Morality Dance, Twirl, Who's the Fairest of Them All, Darryl, Cousin Dixie, Infinity, Seventeen, At Your Disposal: Conveniently Packaged in Three Sections. The company has performed from the east coast to the west coast: Dance Theater Workshop; PS122, Joe's Pub, Symphony Space, Joyce SoHo, HERE Arts Center, Dixon Place, BAX, WAX, West End Theater, Sal Anthony's Movement Salon, University Settlement, Manhattan Theater Source, Frederick Loewe Theatre, BRIC Studio, and the Merce Cunningham Studio Theatre in NYC; Philadelphia Fringe Festival; Studio 303 in Montreal; Atlanta's First Glance Festival and Canopy Theater in Georgia; On The Boards, Bumbershoot, Seattle Mime Theatre and East Hall Theatre in Seattle; and many rural locations in the states of Washington, Colorado, and Iowa. Director Dixie FunLee Shulman has 10 years of experience with project-based, pick-up work. Dixie Fun Dance Theatre marks the transition of Shulman and her 6 dancers into a new company.

  • 12/8/2013
  • 14
  • 0

WittyWorld

http://www.wittyworld.com

WittyWorld was involved in its share of controversies in those early years, as it was later. When its law columnist was charged with defrauding cartoonists, the magazine did its own investigation and gave the story prominent display. On another occasion, Szabo engaged in debate in the trade press with Cartoonists & Writers Syndicate president Jerry Robinson over the issue of creator's rights. In 1990, one controversy led to the White House, when Time magazine chastised First Lady Barbara Bush for writing the greeting for WittyWorld's Budapest festival. Time, as well as then Newsday cartoonist M.G. Lord, said many of the fest's works were scatological, and that in light of then-current censorship instances concerning nudity in the United States, the First Lady could not be affiliated with such an event if it were held in her homeland. Szabo responded to Time that the news magazine "had an unwholesome focus in examining an enormous body of creative work" and that the festival covered a "wide range of topics which went far beyond the single-handedly picked few instances of depictions of male genitalia." WittyWorldhas also been a leader in displaying examples of plagiaristicactivity; at the same time, Szabo has kept abreastof, and reported upon, governmental and religious censorshipand persecution of cartoonists around the world.WittyWorld's findings were widely discussed and reprinted, amongthem in the New York Times in an article by Garry Trudeau. Flattering as it may be, others have also taken--often without permission or proper credit--from WittyWorld. Numerous articles, cartoons, and research information have been lifted and then reprinted in other cartoon periodicals, including Kayhan Caricature (Iran), Mieux Vaut en Rire (France), and Cartoon (Bangladesh). In other instances, WittyWorld features and ideas, especially the calendar of competitions and the depictions of plagiarized cartoons, as well as the magazine's design (Shpitz in Israel and Inkspot in Australia), have been imitated. Among the borrowers are domestic and international trade publications and well-known consumer magazines, including the official FECO (Federation of European Cartoonist Organizations) and CAPS (Comic Art Professional Society) newsletters, and unbelievable as it may sound, even The New Yorker magazine, which just weeks after WittyWorld made international news with its blank cover for cartoonists to draw on, published its own version of the same idea. Cartoonists interviewed by WittyWorld staffers read like a who's who - David Levine, Friz Freleng, Mort Drucker, Chari Rachawat, Larry Alcala, Charles Schulz, Jim Unger, Pat Oliphant, Jerry Robinson, Oleg Dergatchov, Jock Leyden, Lat, Carlos Gimenez, Miroslav Bartak, Ares, Roland Fiddy, Roland Topor, Liao Bingxiong, Tati, among many others. During the years, WittyWorld has published cartoons and/or reported from 110 countries and territories. In the mid-90s two other advances were made. In 1994, WittyWorld was one of the leaders, if not the first, to build a major cartoon site on the World Wide Web of the Internet--it's still a puzzle why it was destroyed by a hacker a few years later. Then in January 1996, the magazine was changed to a bulletin, carrying most of the old features, but adding the quality of more timeliness. For the next two years the new yearly format was ten bulletins along with a color annual magazine. After a twelve-year run, due to personal reasons, Szabo suspended all of WittyWorld's activities in 1999 until the end of 2001, when the organization re-emerged with a completely rebuilt and redesigned web site. In less than a year WittyWorld's international syndication service was launched. Among the first newspapers to sign up were The Washington Post, New Zealand Herald, The Philadelphia Inquirer, Hong Kong Standard and The Boston Globe. WittyWorld's contributions to the advancement of the field of cartooning were due to a versatile and conscientious editorial staff, made up of individuals accomplished and famous in their own right; a former deputy minister of culture, professors, a museum curator, an editor of cartoon and comics encyclopedias, founders and directors of five international cartoon festivals, heads of cartoonists organizations, the executive director of International Animated Film Association (ASIFA), editors of six cartoon and comics periodicals and an online magazine, one of the fathers of the anime movement in the U.S., and many famous cartoonists whose works are seen everywhere. One former editor moved on to become an ambassador of his country.

  • 12/8/2013
  • 15
  • 0

Survey Graphics

http://www.surveygraphics.com.au

Survey Graphics offers state-of the-art and reliable mapping solutions in the areas of photogrammetry, GIS/CAD, Remote Sensing and Image Processing by our highly qualified and experienced professionals. Survey Graphics strives to remain at the cutting-edge of technology, ensuring high quality delivery on schedule for any software platform required by our customers. Apart from our offices in Australia and Indonesia, Survey Graphics maintains a close network with other companies to extend the depth and diversity of our resources to serve the needs of our clients in Australia and South East Asia.

  • 12/8/2013
  • 12
  • 0

Main Street Rag

http://www.mainstreetrag.com

Main Street Rag Publishing Company has been publishing our print magazine: Main Street Rag, uninterrupted since 1996. Among its features are poetry, short fiction, photography and graphic images, essays, interviews, reviews, cartoons and commentary. Subscription information and submission guidelines for MSR are available on the submissions page. Current and back issue information--including who appears in each issue--can now be found at The MSR Online Bookstore on the back and current issues page. There are separate pages for the purchase of both books published by Main Street Rag Publishing Company and one for subscriptions to our quarterly print magazine. All conveniently available for purchase online with the security of PayPal. We publish poetry collections through our annual chapbook contest as well as The Main Street Rag Poetry Award for full-length collections. Information for both chapbook and full-length book contests are available on the Contest page. All other webpages in this site can be accessed at the bottom of each page. Our magazine is financed through subscriptions, direct sales and shelf sales. We receive no money in the form of grants or public funds. Reader support is important and necessary. But Main Street Rag is more than just another small press. We are a bindery and publishing company. We can aid writers as well as other publishers with their projects from start to finish, set up to shipping. Main Street Rag owns its own bindery equipment and specializes in producing perfect bound books and booklets from start to finish. On our Bindery Page, viewers will find a list of the services we offer as well as an abreviated fee schedule. For quotes, please email us with the specifics (as outlined on the Bindery Page) or call 704-573-2516 (M-Th, 8am-7pm EST, F 8am-1pm). In December 2001, Main Street Rag began circulating a monthly electronic newsletter we call the MSR News-e. Among other things, its goal is to provide subscribers with a monthly reminder of events, deadlines, contests, and magazines that are actively seeking manuscripts. To learn more about this service, just click. We hope you enjoy your visit to Main Street Rag. Even more, we hope you like what you see enough to subscribe or sample a copy of the real thing. There is nothing like the smell and feel of paper pulp.

  • 12/8/2013
  • 13
  • 0

The Bear Deluxe Magazine

http://www.orlo.org

About The Bear Deluxe Magazine: The Bear Deluxe Magazine is published by Orlo, a nonprofit organization using the creative arts to explore environmental issues. We have been recognized, among others, by Print magazine, Adbusters and Utne Reader as one of the country's premiere environmental publications. Based in the Pacific Northwest, we publish 20,000 copies of each issue and distribute them nationally.

  • 12/8/2013
  • 14
  • 0

Red Ink Magazine

http://www.redinkmagazine.com

Red Ink is a student-run publication at the University of Arizona under the auspices of the American Indian Studies Program. Red Ink has published the works of writers and artists representing Native Nations from across the United States and the North American hemisphere including the Apache, Cherokee, Lakota, Navajo, Havasupai, Hopi, Micmac, Mohican, Maya, Oneida, Seneca, Chemehuevi, Paiute, Walpole Island Ojibway, Choctaw, Creek, Nez Perce, Northern Arapaho, Acoma Pueblo, Tohono O'odham, Yaqui, Menominee, and many others. Red Ink's primary mission to highlight Native American intellectual and creative expression through the media of poetry, short stories, creative non-fiction, scholarly articles, original artwork and photography, and book, music and film reviews. Red Ink promotes an ongoing discourse with all persons and organizations who are interested in Native American issues and topics. Interdisciplinary in focus, visionary in content, and intergenerational in participation, Red Ink Magazine provides a vital forum for both students and non-students to engage in an open dialogue with other Native American researchers and writers in their respective fields. Red Ink is designed to promote both scholarly and grassroots publishing by and for Native and non-Native members of--as well as advocates for--indigenous communities. Our goal is to provide a journal that is accessible to non-academics, while also providing a forum for serious scholars. By showcasing a variety of topics as well as literary, scholarly and artistic genres, we hope to appeal to a broad spectrum of people with diverse interests. Red Ink has published several special theme issues, including ones dedicated to Indian gaming, Native children, Native language revitalization and development, and tribal governance and economic development. In addition to scholarly works, Red Ink also publishes an altogether unique mix of poetry, photographs, artwork, short stories, first-person essays, political and social commentaries, cartoons, and reviews of recent books, films and music. And no one could ever forget Red Ink sage Watt Scraper, the 166-year-old Cherokee author of the popular "Unegadihi Speaks."

  • 12/8/2013
  • 13
  • 0

Moment Magazine

http://www.momentmag.com

Catch The Moment is the leading provider of digital Interactive Event Photography. Their services are performed in a professional and energetic manner, delivered with trackable results and designed to maximize every events marketing opportunity. Companies use CTM for their quality backlit green screen (patent pending), print on-site and opt-in e-marketing capabilities.

  • 12/8/2013
  • 13
  • 0

Tribune Publishing Company

http://www.tribune.com

Tribune Publishing is the leading U.S. major-market newspaper group, with the third-largest total circulation. The company operates 14 daily newspapers: Los Angeles Times ; Chicago Tribune ; Newsday (Long Island, N.Y.); The Sun (Baltimore); South Florida Sun-Sentinel ; Orlando Sentinel ; Hartford Courant ; The Morning Call (Allentown, Pa . ); Daily Press (Newport News, Va.); The Advocate (Stamford, Conn.); Greenwich Time (Greenwich, Conn.); and Hoy, a Spanish-language newspaper published in New York, Los Angeles and Chicago. Additional newspapers for Hispanic consumers, each published weekly, are El Sentinel in Orlando and el Sentinel in South Florida. Tribune Publishing includes Tribune Media Services, a leading provider of entertainment listings and content syndication to print and electronic media; Tribune Interactive, a top source of online news and information; and CLTV, the Chicago region's only 24-hour cable news channel. Investments include CareerBuilder (33% owned), Classified Ventures (29%) and CrossMedia Services (33%).

  • 12/8/2013
  • 13
  • 0

Catholic News Service

http://www.catholicnews.com

Catholic News Service, headquartered in Washington, was founded in 1920. It includes a key bureau in Rome and associated writers from all across the world. Other publications include the biweekly newsletter Catholic Trends and the educational supplement Faith Today! that appears in numerous Catholic newspapers. A copy of Origins' design is attached.

  • 12/8/2013
  • 13
  • 0

Note

Not found any data