Holiday time in Union Square

It’s not the holidays without a visit to Union Square in NYC. It’s one of my favorite places in the city – during any season. My favorite thing in the summer is a Mr. Softee truck on almost every corner surrounding the square. I’ve counted as many as seven trucks at one time.

But during October and November, Union Square comes alive. It starts in October with pumpkins and fall colors popping up all over. And in November, it turns red with all the Christmas stuff.

There is always a green market and in November, that is joined by a holiday craft bazaar, with the best hot chocolate. Mix that with chess players, Hare Krishnas, a fortune teller or two, art on the sidewalks and some odd protest or two and it’s all a perfect mix.

Music in the parks

Enjoyed ice skating in Brant Park in NYC recently. There’s a holiday bazaar, an indoor restaurant to get food and hot drinks and lots of music and ice skating in the center of the city.

Also came upon this piano player in Washington Square Park one Saturday. The piano was just there and he was just playing. Such a beautiful moment.

The wall of color

It’s jarring. And colorful. As you enter the subway at Union Square in NYC, you are confronted with this awe-inspiring wall created out of post it notes. It’s called a therapy wall or a sticky note confession wall, created after Trump won the election. Most post its are a protest, some are cheering Trump on.

The post its go on and on at Union Square, maybe thousands of feet. Governor Andrew Cuomo visited the wall and left his own message:

“New York State holds the torch high! – Andrew C.

‘Give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses yearning to be free … I lift my lamp beside the golden door’ Emma Lazarus

STATUE OF LIBERTY”

Check out the video above, the subway performer’s music is perfect for the setting.

Budding artists update

Well, lo and behold,, I received an email from the teacher in the previous story about the students at MOMA, he wanted to thank me for the story. I had wondered how he found it since his name wasn’t published in the story and he told me that someone at MOMA saw the story and sent it to him.

His name is Sebastian Alappat and he told me this is a special program called SPARK. “My goal as the founder of SPARK is to cultivate and foster that creative fire in kids, if they are artists or not. By introducing the elements to them, you never know what they might be inspired to do. The Museum of Art immersion was two days, two museums and the results were amazing,” he said.

You can learn more about SPARK at www.thespark.nyc .

Budding artists

I went to MOMA (Museum of Modern Art) again, it seems like I visit every time I’m in New York. I stopped by in October and in July and again now, in November. It’s like a home away from home for me. Maybe because so many of my favorite paintings are there, but maybe my favorite paintings are there because I’m there so often and I recognize them and they are familiar and that’s what makes it home for me. I guess it’s my favorite that I like to visit, Van Gogh’s Starry Night. Maybe that’s why I go.

Anyway, today it was pretty cool because there were a handful of young school kids there with their teacher and they were drawing the paintings. The kids may have been about 8 or 9 years old. And it caught my attention because I sort of did the same thing in college, but I had to recreate an image from a photo, not the actual painting like these school kids. New York school kids have this great advantage of growing up surrounded by art and culture.

I was going to ask the teacher about it, but I didn’t want to dilute their adventure by getting myself involved. I watched them go from room to room, some held back, as I guess they aren’t born artists, but some got so into it. It was such a pleasure to see.

Drawing Tomversation

I am getting comics done for the January 1 launch of Tomversation, which will be published daily on Facebook at Facebook.com/tomversation. Hope to see you there.

Hope you “like” the page and enjoy the daily comics when they pop up on your feed.

My Christmas tree is up already!

15027409_10206308201537552_7656264727295669275_nI put the Christmas tree up yesterday. I know it’s mid-November, but I’m leaving town for a bit and wanted it to be up and ready when I return in December. It’s sort of like early voting, takes the pressure off!

I love the Spidey ornament. I think I won this in this dumb game we play every year. People buy an ornament, wrap it and place it on the table, then after drawing straws or something, people choose the wrapped ornament that they would like. People can then steal from them when it’s there turn and therein lies the rub. I think the ornaments should stay wrapped, so you are gambling when you choose the ornament from someone, it’s like door number 1, 2 or 3. But we unwrap the ornament when we choose it and everyone then knows what it is, so there is a lot of stealing going on. It sort of makes it best to be the last one chosen since you then have access to any ornament you would like simply by stealing it.

I usually get something good. One year I got an Elvis ornament, another year a nice Snoopy ornament and I think last year it was a small record player.

Election day in America

vote

Tomversation and Facebook

tomversation-tommyI’ve had my comics on hold for such a long time, waiting for the right moment. The right moment never seems to come. My goal was to be published in newspapers daily, and I’ve had a few bites from rather large newspapers, but the timing is always off. I’ve also tried to join comics sites, but in the end, they really don’t get the readership that you think they would. The problem is I’m trying to be part of a dying profession. To be part of comics in the 1940s and 1950s would have been ideal. Comics were made for newspapers and it pains me not to be part of the original format. Almost like making a movie and having it go right to video, rather than be on the silver screen, which is what movies were meant to do.

Newspapers tell me they love my work, but they are so hesitant to drop a comic for mine because of the age-old dilemma of people dropping their subscriptions when you drop their favorite comic. Plus after careful contemplation, I was thinking, do I really want to be tied to a non-ending deadline? Comics are digital today and not necessarily published daily, although I am comfortable with that schedule.

I follow Guy Gilchrist, the cartoonist for Nancy, on Instagram and I see how he is constantly drawing in hotel rooms because he travels so much. Deadlines! While I like and respect deadlines, I wonder if I would go mad after a few years of those. Also, for a long time I liked the size constraint. You know, you have this box that this size and you have to do your thing in there daily. But it’s not like that anymore and the current crop of readers – Millennials – are used to different boxes and shapes, sort of like Elaine on Seinfeld with the muffin tops – it’s the part of the muffin that pops out of the pan and does it’s own thing. Digital comics can do their own thing.

230082_426053614117201_1514202927_nBut I don’t want to publish at a website daily because I don’t believe that people will drop everything to come to the website to read a single panel cartoon daily, but they will on Facebook and I’ve always been a fan of social media for comics. For a long time I did a comic daily on Instagram and I had thousands of readers a day. It just came up on their feeds and they read it that way. Unobtrusively, because social media is unobtrusive.

Over a billion people use Facebook daily. A billion! That’s some potential audience. When Berkeley Breathed brought back Bloom County, he used Facebook and he publishes there daily, he has about 670,000 fans on there and New Yorker Cartoons has over 913,000 fans and amazingly, Matthew Inman who does The Oatmeal, has almost 4 million fans on Facebook, he links to his website from there. The Facebook posts are “liked” and shared all day long!

georgetekai2.jpg

I also noticed that some of my comics were shared many times and “liked” many times over the years on Facebook. I had a “Doctor Who” comic shared by actor George Takei once and it went crazy viral – almost 30,000 shares and over 85,000 likes! Recently I had a similar experience with a political cartoon I ran which someone shared on Facebook and it took off.

So it’s come to my realization, which was staring me in the face all the time, that Facebook is the place for my Tomversation comic panel. I had thought of making a widget where people could place it on their own websites and share Tomversation daily, but simply by clicking the “share” button on Facebook, is doing the same thing. And every time someone “likes” a comic, their friends see that they liked it. So starting January 1, 2017, Tomversation will appear daily, or almost daily on Facebook and probably Instagram and Twitter, but Facebook should have the most impact. My goal is to build up my fan base during the year. I know people like my comics, so it’s just a  a matter of being consistent in posting them, which I’m good at doing. I had to twist my brain a little into realizing that digital is where comics are these days. Unfortunately, reading a daily newspapers, literally holding it in your hands, is becoming a thing of the past, like dial telephones and film.

I do hope you’ll become a fan at Facebook.com/Tomversation and you’ll receive the updates when they start. That’s one thing I like about Facebook – you don’t have to go out of your way to see news, comics, friends, etc., it all just appears on your wall without any fuss. I hope that Tomversation becomes part of your wall. If you don’t like a comic one day, just bypass it without a mention or “like,” it if you like it, and share it! Easy!

And you can always read my thoughts and see what I’m up to here on the Tomversation blog, where I will post a batch of comics at once, so you can binge read them, sort of like Netflix for comics. If you were directly linked into this post through another site, here is the main Homepage of Tomversation, you can see what’s been posted here lately.

430113_414794188576477_342135744_n

Calling Tommy

My neighbors’ dog’s name is Tommy, so when they call him, I sometimes think they are calling me, which reminds me of a neighbor we had years ago. Their dog’s name was Richard and every time they would go out and call, “Richard! Richard!” It sounded so funny.

My cousin’s name is Tommy, too, but for some reason, whenever someone calls one of us, we know which one they are referring to. I’m not sure why, maybe it’s the tone of their voice. When we were young, they would call me Big Tommy and him Little Tommy. That stopped, not sure when. Both of us have grandfathers and uncles on different sides of the family that are named Tom or Tommy. On my mother’s side, her brother was Tommy, her father Tom and me Thomas. I never liked Thomas, not sure why. When the others passed away, I became Tom or Tommy.

I can tell when people met me by what they call me. I know which friends introduced us and how long ago it was by what I’m called. One friend used to call me Thomas, and to this day, when someone calls me Thomas, outside the family, I know I was introduced to them by Franco, a friend, so many years ago.

Now I’m Tomversation. 🙂