Re: Quote Identification Quizzzzzzzzzz!

go0gleplex wrote:

I was trying to not say anything about south park.  But I do think worthless and idiotic is giving it far too much credit.

Spongebob falls right in there too...as do the majority of 'this generation's toons'.

Heck, most of them seem to be drawn by people without a shred of talent also, unless looking like something done by a drunken monkey is considered talent.  smile


Well, it's certainly true that Sponge Bob isn't exactly a bastion of artistic endeavour.

It *IS* funny, however - at least, I think so....

Re: Quote Identification Quizzzzzzzzzz!

thedugan wrote:

No, I'm not a fan either. I just couldn't get interested in it. Too many '4th wall' comments

I'm not going to say you have to like South Park (it's not for everyone), but for the record, I have NEVER seen a fourth-wall comment from anyone in the show.

Daniel Kast
Majestic Twelve Games
cricket@mj12games.com

Re: Quote Identification Quizzzzzzzzzz!

go0gleplex wrote:

Heck, most of them seem to be drawn by people without a shred of talent also, unless looking like something done by a drunken monkey is considered talent.  smile

Really?

We can't be any further away from each other on this opinion.

The cartoons from when I was young were cookie-cutter, poorly-rendered crap. Even the ones I enjoyed watching were badly drawn. The toons I mention in this thread, however, are for the most part, very well-done. Whether you like them or not, at least they have a style all their own.

Maybe you're thinking of the Saturday AM cartoons these days, which are worse than anything Filmation ever did.

Daniel Kast
Majestic Twelve Games
cricket@mj12games.com

Re: Quote Identification Quizzzzzzzzzz!

cricket wrote:
go0gleplex wrote:

Heck, most of them seem to be drawn by people without a shred of talent also, unless looking like something done by a drunken monkey is considered talent.  smile

Really?

We can't be any further away from each other on this opinion.

The cartoons from when I was young were cookie-cutter, poorly-rendered crap. Even the ones I enjoyed watching were badly drawn. The toons I mention in this thread, however, are for the most part, very well-done. Whether you like them or not, at least they have a style all their own.

Maybe you're thinking of the Saturday AM cartoons these days, which are worse than anything Filmation ever did.

The animation techniques are better, the characterization and representation are more akin to Van Gough than DaVinci or Monet. 

Then again, I think most of the so called "popular culture" music (rap, metal, etc.) is lacking as well. wink  Mozart, Bach, Chopin, etc. are more my opinion of artistic.  Definitely anachronistic in my perceptions. *chuckles*  :mrgreen:

Re: Quote Identification Quizzzzzzzzzz!

cricket wrote:
thedugan wrote:

No, I'm not a fan either. I just couldn't get interested in it. Too many '4th wall' comments

I'm not going to say you have to like South Park (it's not for everyone), but for the record, I have NEVER seen a fourth-wall comment from anyone in the show.

By 'Fourth Wall', i mean references to things in real life. South Park is set too much in the real world for my taste.

Maybe I'm using the term in the wrong way, but that's what annoys me about it.  <shrug>

Re: Quote Identification Quizzzzzzzzzz!

South Park is, IMO, to say the least, inspired. It's a "to the bone" social "critic" on the modern western society. The animation art of south park concerning cartoons, is as much an art revolution as the impressionism was a revolution to painting.

go0gleplex wrote:

Then again, I think most of the so called "popular culture" music (rap, metal, etc.) is lacking as well.  Mozart, Bach, Chopin, etc. are more my opinion of artistic. Definitely anachronistic in my perceptions. *chuckles*

Popular culture and popular tastes isn't the same. There are crap popular tastes and the object of those tastes will not be part of popular culture. That doesn't mean that I like everything. But there are things I don't lack for personnal reasons and still I can give it value as popular culture.

Re: Quote Identification Quizzzzzzzzzz!

cricket wrote:

I'm not going to say you have to like South Park (it's not for everyone)

Good, glad to hear there's still freedom of thought smile

Seriously tho, I understand south park, I just don't LIKE south park.

Oh, and that style is to cartoons as impressionism is to painting?? Dude, that "style" is informed by bad flash-imation and is as much it's own art style as drop shadows are.

to each his own, as long as it's my way. big_smile

Re: Quote Identification Quizzzzzzzzzz!

I didn't mind the cutout animation in Monty Python....

Re: Quote Identification Quizzzzzzzzzz!

jimbeau wrote:

Oh, and that style is to cartoons as impressionism is to painting?? Dude, that "style" is informed by bad flash-imation and is as much it's own art style as drop shadows are.

Sure, Jim. Welcome to a long line of people who said the same about a new approach to art, a new way to do things, and a new language. Let's see...

Andy Warhol: "Puting different horrid inks in a sucession of Monroe's pictures not only it is not art, as it is a dubious complement to the actress Marilyn Monroe". Victus Burns

Piet Cornelis Mondrian: "As an artist, this man should be very well cared. In a mental institution".
I really don't like Mondrian. But he is in the history of art and the french gentleman that made this generous "critique" not only is it not, as we don't even know or care to know his name.

I could go on and on, but I lack the will. Enough said that its perfectly fine to not like a thing. But to confuse "not liking" with "lack of art qualities" is a long step.

Re: Quote Identification Quizzzzzzzzzz!

Yeah, my kids made all kinds of "ART"..... :shock:

Seriously, though - People are going to like what they like. Somebody paid a crapload for a Van Gogh a few weeks ago. If I could print out some of my own renders and get them on canvas (or similiar medium) I'd much rather have THAT on my wall.
Didn't care for Picasso, The "Melting Watches" dude, or a lot of what we call "Impressionist", I'd rather pay 20-30 bucks for a nice landscape to stick on my wall. I also like "Dogs Playing Poker" - but more for it's comedic value...

Dutch masters are more my preference - but you're not going to get THAT in a cartoon. We can do better than South Park, though.

Re: Quote Identification Quizzzzzzzzzz!

thedugan wrote:

Yeah, my kids made all kinds of "ART".....

Let them, Dugan, one day you may have a surprise.

thedugan wrote:

Somebody paid a crapload for a Van Gogh a few weeks ago.

The inflated prices of art are more a social imperative than a quatification of quality. The problem is "uniqueness" and that is a social problem of giving value to things that only one person can have. I'm all for the copy machines.

However there is also uniqueness in the art of some people.  And the way light and dimension began to be seen after Van Gogh, and after prejudice could be riped apart, permitted to g through a road that ended for example in the comix and cartoons. You may not like it, but it is unfair and dangerous to take out the importance of new ways to see things.

thedugan wrote:

Didn't care for Picasso, The "Melting Watches" dude, or a lot of what we call "Impressionist", I'd rather pay 20-30 bucks for a nice landscape to stick on my wall. I also like "Dogs Playing Poker" - but more for it's comedic value...

One day an American journalist said to Picasso that everybody could do what he was doing. Picasso laughed and draw a perfect circle just with a pencil. And then he asked if the journalist could do that.

Salvador Dali has maybe the most profound paintings in modern history. Few people could, then and after, reimagine reality as he could. Do you like fantasy? Everybody drank from him. The insconscient, the fantasy, the realization that our fears, desires and shame is as true as a lanscape.

The impressionists were able, not only create a new approach to art, as to redefine the way we see the world.

Dogs Playing Poker, by C. M. Coolidge, probably wouldn't be possible if before there wasn't impressionism.

Re: Quote Identification Quizzzzzzzzzz!

Okay...the convo is starting to degenerate.

In perspective,
Southpark has nothing artistic to it that not just anyone can do, including children.  I think Jim's point is that it is simplistic in nature as opposed to something more technically proficient and skilled such as one of the masters or even anime.  From that perspecitive...it really isn't art.

My objections to a lot of today's "comedy" is that it tends to focus on the vulgar, the dark side of our society, and keeps things obvious...instead of looking to being clever of wit anymore.  Then again, like most things, nothing is original which is required if you want to keep your ratings with something "fresh".  It's pretty sad really.  If I wanted to see everyday life, I'd look to the news or out my window...*shrug*

The problem with all of this is mostly it is opinion and perception....and as history has amply demonstrated, not everyone is going to see things the same way. 

Best to simply drop the convo if you find something rankling you about it than respond and make things worse. Or the thread will reach a point of needing to be locked.

Re: Quote Identification Quizzzzzzzzzz!

go0gleplex wrote:

Okay...the convo is starting to degenerate.

Starting?
  :mrgreen:

go0gleplex wrote:

In perspective,
Southpark has nothing artistic to it that not just anyone can do, including children.  I think Jim's point is that it is simplistic in nature as opposed to something more technically proficient and skilled such as one of the masters or even anime.  From that perspecitive...it really isn't art.

The problem with all of this is mostly it is opinion and perception....and as history has amply demonstrated, not everyone is going to see things the same way.

I'm not a big South Park fan either, but I'll disagree a little bit here.
The animation for SP *is* art.
It's very simplistic, and I think a deliberate intent of the creators.
But it's still art.
Heck, a six year old's drawing of a dog is art.
It's just not very good art, unless you're the parent of the six year old who drew it.
wink
It's the same with any creative medium.
There are going to be those who like something that's created, and those who don't, but that certainly doesn't invalidate that something. 
Sermon over.
Kevin

Re: Quote Identification Quizzzzzzzzzz!

Blackronin wrote:
thedugan wrote:

Yeah, my kids made all kinds of "ART".....

Let them, Dugan, one day you may have a surprise.

The juxtaposition of 'Crapload' and 'art'...?
big_smile
I do not stifle my kids. My son is into sports (I'm not) and my daughter plays the bassoon....



Blackronin wrote:
thedugan wrote:

Somebody paid a crapload for a Van Gogh a few weeks ago.

The inflated prices of art are more a social imperative than a quatification of quality. The problem is "uniqueness" and that is a social problem of giving value to things that only one person can have. I'm all for the copy machines.

Xerox is a big company because of that....
smile

Blackronin wrote:

However there is also uniqueness in the art of some people.  And the way light and dimension began to be seen after Van Gogh, and after prejudice could be riped apart, permitted to g through a road that ended for example in the comix and cartoons. You may not like it, but it is unfair and dangerous to take out the importance of new ways to see things.

They have every right in the world to paint crap. I have every right in the world to SAY it's crap.

My kids' first breath was important - I can live without Van Gogh.


Blackronin wrote:
thedugan wrote:

Didn't care for Picasso, The "Melting Watches" dude, or a lot of what we call "Impressionist", I'd rather pay 20-30 bucks for a nice landscape to stick on my wall. I also like "Dogs Playing Poker" - but more for it's comedic value...

One day an American journalist said to Picasso that everybody could do what he was doing. Picasso laughed and draw a perfect circle just with a pencil. And then he asked if the journalist could do that.

Salvador Dali has maybe the most profound paintings in modern history. Few people could, then and after, reimagine reality as he could. Do you like fantasy? Everybody drank from him. The insconscient, the fantasy, the realization that our fears, desires and shame is as true as a lanscape.

The impressionists were able, not only create a new approach to art, as to redefine the way we see the world.

Dogs Playing Poker, by C. M. Coolidge, probably wouldn't be possible if before there wasn't impressionism.

I Disagree....It's one thing to allow freedom of expression, It's quite another to ascribe importance of any particular interpretation of it.

And to mangle a quote: "Crap is in the eye of the beholder"

...my offer of 30$ for the Van Gogh is on the table....
big_smile

Re: Quote Identification Quizzzzzzzzzz!

go0gleplex wrote:

Okay...the convo is starting to degenerate.

Naah, just turned a corner...

Degeneration implies things are going wrong. The forum is darned healthy, given the caliber and breadth of the responses.

go0gleplex wrote:

In perspective,
Southpark has nothing artistic to it that not just anyone can do, including children.  I think Jim's point is that it is simplistic in nature as opposed to something more technically proficient and skilled such as one of the masters or even anime.  From that perspecitive...it really isn't art.

My objections to a lot of today's "comedy" is that it tends to focus on the vulgar, the dark side of our society, and keeps things obvious...instead of looking to being clever of wit anymore.  Then again, like most things, nothing is original which is required if you want to keep your ratings with something "fresh".  It's pretty sad really.  If I wanted to see everyday life, I'd look to the news or out my window...*shrug*

The problem with all of this is mostly it is opinion and perception....and as history has amply demonstrated, not everyone is going to see things the same way. 

Best to simply drop the convo if you find something rankling you about it than respond and make things worse. Or the thread will reach a point of needing to be locked.

I agree with Kevin about whether or not it's "ART" - but I agree it's not worth a lot.

I prefer my comics to have comedy that's not hot off the news page. While it might be funny to some, all too often it's depressing to me. Hence my preference for the more simplistic world view in Anime and Comics.

There's an expression; "I used to be disgusted, now I'm just amused"....

Re: Quote Identification Quizzzzzzzzzz!

go0gleplex wrote:

My objections to a lot of today's "comedy" is that it tends to focus on the vulgar, the dark side of our society, and keeps things obvious...instead of looking to being clever of wit anymore.  Then again, like most things, nothing is original which is required if you want to keep your ratings with something "fresh".  It's pretty sad really.  If I wanted to see everyday life, I'd look to the news or out my window...*shrug*

I think that we're close tothe same point of view in that respect...

Preferences:

Duck Dodgers

Johnny Bravo

Johnny Quest

8th Man

Space Ghost

Herculoids

(If I'm in the mood for silly) Power Puff Girls

Ben Ten

YOUR TURN!
big_smile

Re: Quote Identification Quizzzzzzzzzz!

Okay. This is a very old complex discussion. I'll just say this more two cents of opinion and leave it at it.

The concept of art is subjective. The first greeks who made the pots we now consider amazing works of art, didn't had the concept. For them it was work. Pretty to sell.
Art doesn't have to be difficult or crafty. Some of it is, and we admire that, but it is not necessary to be true art. Mozart didn't have any difficulty in composing. Yet...
Not liking a piece of art doesn't make it lesser of a peace of art. And I don't feel that I have to like it because everybody says its a work of art.
I wouldn't waste a million in a painting, because if i had a million I would have better things to do with it.
But I sitted for two hours admiring "La Liberté guidant le peuple" from Delacroix.
Doing a piece of art with simple mechanics requires sometimes more knowledge of the universe than doing it the hard way. Can I put here the good phrase: "Simple but not simplistic?"
Pop art uses the multiplication of themes and the technological capacity of our society to express itself, but the multiplication of themes and the technological capacity is not in itself art.


go0gleplex wrote:

Southpark has nothing artistic to it that not just anyone can do, including children.

I teach young children, so please, name me one that can make south park and I point her as a genius.

go0gleplex wrote:

My objections to a lot of today's "comedy" is that it tends to focus on the vulgar, the dark side of our society, and keeps things obvious...instead of looking to being clever of wit anymore.

The dark side, yes. All good comedies, since the greek theatre, passing through Shakespeare and ending in the "Comedie Noir" were about the dark side of people and societies. Why do you think comedy was invented? To laugh about the powerful without the powerful put the critic in the jail or... worse. Vulgar? Some, yes. But some look like being cruel and vulgar and are just trying to maintain our eyes open. About being clever and witty? Well, you can see Duffy Duck and Bugs fighting innocently each other and pretend that the world isn't changing. That old models are dead, that we have to deal with new perspectives, new problems, new ways of scaryig us, or you can deal with it laughing. I prefer the last one.

thedugan wrote:

I Disagree....It's one thing to allow freedom of expression, It's quite another to ascribe importance of any particular interpretation of it.

And to mangle a quote: "Crap is in the eye of the beholder"

...my offer of 30$ for the Van Gogh is on the table....

Its your offer, It's legit, I won't try to convince you out of it. But if someone try to sell you a true Van Gogh, say, for about, ahhh... 3000$, okay 5000$, please hold it for me because I would buy it... I know it is a loosing business, but I'd do it... No problemo.

Re: Quote Identification Quizzzzzzzzzz!

If I knew that someone would buy it for 5K, and I could get it 2K....

Sure, but that's business, not something to hang on my wall.

Re: Quote Identification Quizzzzzzzzzz!

Well...I for one was doing drawings that looked like southpark (simple geometric shapes together) when I was 3-4 years old. Then again, I've been drawing since I was 2...and my mom used to do fashion plate drawings in High School.  So I guess I can show ya myself on that part.  I was doing southpark in construction paper at 6.  And submitted design modifications to the Saturn V rocket for payload deliver and warship (missile) use to NASA in 6th grade.  *shrug*  Then again, I'm anything but average.


As I've tried to tell my sons...Humor that is cruel, demeaning, and at the expense of someone else's dignity and self-worth is not humor. It's just meaness and wrong.  *shrug* Again, I'm something of an anomaly in my perceptions of things too. I don't see gray. Half-right is still half-assed. wink

Re: Quote Identification Quizzzzzzzzzz!

Didn't I told myself I was stop posting in the art arguing thread?!

go0gleplex wrote:

Well...I for one was doing drawings that looked like southpark (simple geometric shapes together) when I was 3-4 years old. Then again, I've been drawing since I was 2...and my mom used to do fashion plate drawings in High School. So I guess I can show ya myself on that part. I was doing southpark in construction paper at 6. And submitted design modifications to the Saturn V rocket for payload deliver and warship (missile) use to NASA in 6th grade. *shrug* Then again, I'm anything but average.

If you were doing what you said you were doing, then you aren't average at all. Clearly.

But, being simple geometric shaped images, the way SP is animated and mixed with the script is far from simple or mediocre. Is high comedy, by my standards.

go0gleplex wrote:

As I've tried to tell my sons...Humor that is cruel, demeaning, and at the expense of someone else's dignity and self-worth is not humor. It's just meaness and wrong. *shrug* Again, I'm something of an anomaly in my perceptions of things too. I don't see gray. Half-right is still half-assed.

All humour is made at the expense of someone else´s dignity. There is dignity and dignity, of course. Bugs Bunny is cruel and incapable of feeling sorry for anyone, all together with that sweet bunny face.

Charles Chaplin and Buster Keaton make humour at the expense of themselves and their dagnity and we love it.

If humour is used to show our personnal and social hypocrisies, I don't care if it is at the expense of someone or if it is cruel. If it is to sustain those hypocrisies, racism, xenophoby or other things we consider inhuman, then yes, I agree with you.

Re: Quote Identification Quizzzzzzzzzz!

Here's some of my stuff from 20 and 10 years ago as example.   wink

http://www.angelfire.com/or/FireHorse/gallery.html

Re: Quote Identification Quizzzzzzzzzz!

"Penguins!"
Now there's a quote that only Dan and I, and possibly a few other select people who were at a con in St. Louis, can appreciate.
Kevin
PS: There's nothing like a few attack penguins to liven up a gaming table.
:mrgreen:

Re: Quote Identification Quizzzzzzzzzz!

"And now, it's time for the penguin on top of your television set to explode"

Re: Quote Identification Quizzzzzzzzzz!

Erect men expose themselves in apertures.

Yep, this is a classic.
Believe it or not, this is actually a line in the rules from the old SPI game Sniper.
And I've still got the game.
:mrgreen:
Kevin