Panel One: Ian’s attending a call at his work.
Boss: I’m going to have the team rotate through being in charge while I’m away, we’re starting with Ian.
Ian (Looking very confused): …you’re starting with what?

Panel Two: Boss talking to a child Ian drawing with crayons.
Narrator: …inside Ian’s mind
Boss: Hey there big guy! Would you like to manage the team while I’m away?
Ian: Uhh…OK. Can I drink chocolate milk?
Boss: Sure big guy, you’re going to be in charge!
Ian: Uhm OK. I like chocolate milk.

Panel Three: Same scene
Boss: Good for you buddy! And what do you do if the regional administrator calls?
Ian: Um. Use the green crayon?
 

Latest Collections

Questionable Command

I think being an artist comes with a healthy dose of imposter syndrome on most occasions. Although I can and have run teams, managed people, and trained others how to do it - I also draw comics...? I don't know - it's a Venn diagram that's hard to understand I guess.

AI Art Assist

https://www3.nhk.or.jp/nhkworld/en/news/videos/20241209155445347/index.html

I really like what this offers to someone like me who works alone on my comics; but I also worry that it could be used against me. If I train an AI to only replicate my style, what happens if I lose control of that AI? Theoretically I could also sell my AI assistant to someone else, and they could then make their own art that looks like mine without any input from me – at which point it doesn’t matter that I’m involved. It’s a complicated thing to consider and I’m already getting a headache.

Another important point – there’s nothing stopping someone else from mimicking my artwork to begin with, and that means that I’m already competing against AI art if someone wishes to replicate my style. Does that mean I should jump in to using AI assistants for my comics so I can produce more work before someone else tries to beat me to it?

Honestly, I would have preferred to retire never having to consider any of these implications, but the genie is out of the bottle and we’re all forced to deal with it. I think these new developments make earning a living harder, not easier, for artists.

Cook What You Like

Designers follow the concept of design thinking/questioning – where we focus on others to inform how to design.
Artists cook what they want to eat, and they let others figure out how they want to eat it.