Cartooning as it relates to the Sisyphus Syndrome

I’m acquainted with two individuals whose personal financial net worth exceeds 100 million bucks and (incredibly) they both want to become cartoonists. Their net worth comes from sources other than cartooning, needless to say, one inherited, the other self-made, and beyond that, their only slice of common ground is the fact that they can’t draw, can’t write humor but they still keep chugging along. Why?Hey, my wife was a “shrink” and some others on my family tree have “psychiatrist” imprinted on their name plates, but I’d never seek info on this subject. In relation to the insanity of cartoonists, I retain a “don’t ask, don’t tell” policy and nope, I’m not naming names here.Chester Gould is relatively unknown in spite of the fact that he’s been in the public eye longer than most Hollywood film stars have been on earth. Clint Eastwood was a sperm cell when Chester began entertaining the world public with America’s favorite crime stopper, Dick Tracy. I recall a conversation with the late great Charles Schulz (creator of “Peanuts”) who lamented the fact that he’d never met Chester Gould. A loss in newspaper syndicated cartooning was the cancellation of “Brenda Starr,” a very serious newspaper reporter with a mystery man (guy with an eye patch of all things) whose comic strip space allocation diminished in size to minimize the qualities of illustration and dialogue. A great classic strip, Brenda just couldn’t survive. She’s probably been replaced by sandbag columnists of the left or right persuasions or some bottom-feeding, celebrity-dirt-dishing jerk. These characters are consistent in the fact that they can bore you on the boob tube or in print. They replace the entertaining graphics of comic art published in readable size. Comic strips! Happy! Hey, doesn’t anyone know from happy anymore?The film industry feasts on animated artwork although what could be referred to as a comic art training ground is minimal. There’s no informal area of development for that art. Comic book sales are down, and magazines, formerly an early training ground for cartooning, have relatively few market places. Shrek was a character created by a classic New Yorker cartoonist named William Steig, not exactly a household name.The reality is the best one can hope for is a tight squeeze of low income and the good luck to have a spouse with a high paying job. No Vegas gambler would touch a bet on the success ratio of an artist entering the field of newspaper syndication or cartoon art in general. Only the plight of Sisyphus, a legendary king of Corinth, could capture the image of the difficulties.Sisyphus “finked” on the great god Zeus, as the god, disguised as a swan, was headed toward a distant island to have an “affair,” (aka cheat on his wife). The Corinthian king squealed on him. The revenge of Zeus was to sentence Sisyphus to Hades, where he would roll a boulder up to the top of a hill, only to have it roll back down to the other side of the hill. The Greek king was doomed to roll it up and down, an eternal task in Greek Hell. Coincidentally, this eternal effort became a favored image among cartoonists internationally. So, if you’re reading this and if you’ve got some major bucks in the bank, climb back into your Bentley, drive happily off into the setting sunset, avoid the Sisyphus Syndrome of this profession, and personally, I highly recommend civil service or organized crime.Bill Lee is a cartoonist who lives in Sharon and New York City. He has created cartoons for The Lakeville Journal and many other publications for years.

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