“I’m down to one comic strip after the syndicate suggested I “retire” the other one and I’m sitting here mooching pizza off a small-town newspaperman. How do you think it went!?"
Is this a standard interview question? "Instead of telling us about your comic STRIP, could you instead tell of us your greatest failure in life?" BATS: “Yes! I totally bombed at comic BOOKS, which was NOT MY FAULT. And 50+ years later, I blame it on someone so dead, they can’t sue me for libel!”
“First I went to DC, where they said my gigantic word Zeppelins covered up the art. So I ducked into a phone booth and cut the words to a minimum. Then I went to Marvel and they said I should use bigger word balloons to hide how bad my art was.
“Then I went to King Features, and the rest is history…”
Skip goads Batton into sharing the tale of his greatest failure. Batton enthusiastically complies. Obviously, “Batton” is a sad old man starved for attention.
In real life neither DC or Marvel accepts “blind applications or submissions”—so just how DO YOU get a job with them if you can’t get your foot in the door?
Bob Rozakis, now retired after a long career at DC, recently celebrated his 50th wedding anniversary
Batton: “Then somebody beat me up for hogging a telephone phone booth for three hours.”
Seriously? Did Batyuk actually do this in real life? What an inconsiderate jerk. Suppose someone needed the telephone.
Why not do the rewrites while enjoying a coffee comfortably seated at a restaurant table or booth, instead of being crammed inside a tiny telephone booth? Not too bright.
Batton: “The people at Marvel laughed at me because I couldn’t stand up straight.”
Wouldn’t this be happening during the so-called Silver Age great expansion, when the two giants were bringing out new books left, and, right? If I’m right (A big "if,) if you had even a “smidge” of talent as a writer, AND, were willing to work at wages would be far from making you rich, they’d hire you on the spot?
J.J. O'Malley 3 months ago
“I’m down to one comic strip after the syndicate suggested I “retire” the other one and I’m sitting here mooching pizza off a small-town newspaperman. How do you think it went!?"
billsplut 3 months ago
Is this a standard interview question? "Instead of telling us about your comic STRIP, could you instead tell of us your greatest failure in life?" BATS: “Yes! I totally bombed at comic BOOKS, which was NOT MY FAULT. And 50+ years later, I blame it on someone so dead, they can’t sue me for libel!”
Bill Thompson 3 months ago
Can’t write, can’t draw, and his stories were cheesier than that Montoni’s pizza stuck on his claw.
billsplut 3 months ago
What pizza did they order? American “cheeze” slices still in the plastic wrap, topped with bubonic plague sores?
macgyver915 3 months ago
bill, you’re slipping if all you’ve got is pizza! LOL…
French Persons Premium Member 3 months ago
“Yes, we were poor then, but we were happy… because we were poor! With just a cup of tea…a cup of cold tea… Without milk or sugar… or tea!”
sueb1863 3 months ago
“I ended up doing a stupid newspaper comic strip. How do you think it went, genius??”
Gent 3 months ago
This like going to watches a James Bondscraft movie but being forced to watch Ion Flaming talkings about himself throughout the show.
mn4nu 3 months ago
Isn’t the name of this strip Crankshaft?
ksu71 3 months ago
I think I feel a sideways Sunday approaching.
puddleglum1066 3 months ago
“First I went to DC, where they said my gigantic word Zeppelins covered up the art. So I ducked into a phone booth and cut the words to a minimum. Then I went to Marvel and they said I should use bigger word balloons to hide how bad my art was.
“Then I went to King Features, and the rest is history…”
JudithStocker Premium Member 3 months ago
In today’s Crankshaft, it’s great to hear how the master of it got his start and ideas for his long career.
rockyridge1977 3 months ago
I think they are about finished with the pizza…..I hope!!!
Irish53 3 months ago
I wish the publishers of CS would tell Batty that his stories are too long.
Surly Squirrel Premium Member 3 months ago
Skip goads Batton into sharing the tale of his greatest failure. Batton enthusiastically complies. Obviously, “Batton” is a sad old man starved for attention.
tcayer 3 months ago
But then, Slyock Fox premiered, and he learned to draw rudimentary characters. The rest is history.
lemonbaskt 3 months ago
so it was beneath him to apply for a job at harvey comics but then this guy would have ruined casper
mountainclimber 3 months ago
Jon Gnagy, a memory of boring rainy Sundays from long ago. Thanks.
French Persons Premium Member 3 months ago
Panel 2: Why does Batty draw his own face in the upper-left-hand corner? It’s not like we don’t already know it’s him talking.
[Unnamed Reader - 14b4ce] 3 months ago
In real life neither DC or Marvel accepts “blind applications or submissions”—so just how DO YOU get a job with them if you can’t get your foot in the door?
Bob Rozakis, now retired after a long career at DC, recently celebrated his 50th wedding anniversary
Irish53 3 months ago
Meanwhile, Skippy has dozed off due to old age and incredible boredom.
kathleenhicks62 3 months ago
This is a terrible story line—what happened did Crankshaft die??
Surly Squirrel Premium Member 3 months ago
Batton: “Then somebody beat me up for hogging a telephone phone booth for three hours.”
Seriously? Did Batyuk actually do this in real life? What an inconsiderate jerk. Suppose someone needed the telephone.
Why not do the rewrites while enjoying a coffee comfortably seated at a restaurant table or booth, instead of being crammed inside a tiny telephone booth? Not too bright.
Batton: “The people at Marvel laughed at me because I couldn’t stand up straight.”
What a maroon.
Argythree 3 months ago
Disappointing…
lemonbaskt 3 months ago
well why not lie for free greasy pizza
apb1952 Premium Member 3 months ago
Did they get tired of doing Crankshaft? Are Tom and Dan ending another comic strip?
WilliamVollmer 3 months ago
Wouldn’t this be happening during the so-called Silver Age great expansion, when the two giants were bringing out new books left, and, right? If I’m right (A big "if,) if you had even a “smidge” of talent as a writer, AND, were willing to work at wages would be far from making you rich, they’d hire you on the spot?