dwmckim
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This generally applies more to the Fraggle comics though there's also been some of this with the Muppet Classics comics too, so since it's both Fraggles and Muppets - i'm posting this in "Muppet Merchandise" as opposed to the Fraggle folder...
This has kind of been a mild irritation for several months - and as each new issue comes out i see the same thing generally happening so it just continues to just pick at the sore.
It seems like whenever a new Muppet Classic series or new issue of Fraggle Rock comes out, there's the standard Muppet fansite interview with the writers and artists. This happens more with the artists than with the writers though it's happened with both - and in either case, some examples are more extreme than others but by and large there's really a rather quite disturbing (bordering on offensive) recurring theme and strong pattern...
In the inevitable interview, there's the inevitable questions regarding "what was your level of fandom/knowledge about the property beforehand" and "how did you get hired" and the answers more likely than not often are along the lines of:
"Well, I wasn't really a big fan growing up. I was aware of them, but they were just there in the background. I didn't have cable so i didn't watch them. I knew (either Tim Beedle, Joe LeFavi or some other editor or higher-up muckity-muck) because we worked together on such-and-such or knew (Beedle/LeFavi/etc) from when we did this-or-that and they suggested I work on the line. Once i got the job i ordered all the episodes off Netflex/watched the dvds/spend hours on YouTube doing research..."
In a nutshell, it almost always seems like all the people hired to write or draw the comics - regardless of how well they knew or loved the property were all essentially brought on due to having had some kind of pre-existing relationship with one of TPTB. The whole operation of artists seems to all have generated via the "it's not what you know, it's who you know" axiom.
Now i can't draw to save my life (although when i was a kid when i DID draw, it was always Muppets - i always had to throw in a Muppet in each art class project some way or other to where it became my "calling card" - but i digress) - the skill of translating images in my head to a canvas or paper with my hands was never in my artistic skillset the way acting, singing, puppetry and the performing arts have been. But if i was a really skilled artist - and i know there are a LARGE number of major Muppet Freaks who not only have the talent but took courses, somehow trained or looked toward making it more than a hobby - i would really be largely offended by this. Actually, probably because there ARE so many of the aforementioned true lifelong fanatics with training/education/skills and have had experiences like Reeves where he created something astounding that Disney won't even so much as look at or use as a glass coaster get snubbed, is why i get really irritated and put-off by this. If anyone tried to go through traditional channels, they most likely would just be ignored/rejected.
Now if the resulting project was really bad, i would be steam-eminating-from-the-ears FURIOUS. Thankfully, the writers and artists bringing us Muppet and Fraggle comics have lived up to their respective tasks but just think of how even more awesome these would be if they were coming from artists who live, eat, and breathe Muppets and Fraggles - who could draw them in their sleep due to a lifetime of experience and not having to do emergency Netflix cram sessions?
It just really grates on me and rubs me the wrong way when month after month, over and over again, i read all these interviews with people who basically say they got the honored privilage of working on the Fraggle/Muppet comics not because they love the brand or even tried to get hired or sought them out but because The Right Person knew them from something else and approached them - there's a sad and rather disgusting and insulting pattern of people hired who got there not because they had the initial desire and sought after it but were hand-picked due to an outside factor and were handed the Keys to the Kingdom.
Personally, if i was a Fraggle/Muppet lover that had an earnest genuine desire to work on the brand, i would give up any and all traditional means of submission and work on trying to become Tim Beedle's bowling buddy or Joe LeFavi's windshield wiper or flirting up a storm with them at their favorite bar (and if they were straight, doing so in drag). I love the Muppet/Fraggle comics dearly but the constant stream of revelations about how each artist was hired is really just leaving me with a sour taste in my mouth especially given how much it seems like a constant broken-record-style pattern with little variation each go-around.
This has kind of been a mild irritation for several months - and as each new issue comes out i see the same thing generally happening so it just continues to just pick at the sore.
It seems like whenever a new Muppet Classic series or new issue of Fraggle Rock comes out, there's the standard Muppet fansite interview with the writers and artists. This happens more with the artists than with the writers though it's happened with both - and in either case, some examples are more extreme than others but by and large there's really a rather quite disturbing (bordering on offensive) recurring theme and strong pattern...
In the inevitable interview, there's the inevitable questions regarding "what was your level of fandom/knowledge about the property beforehand" and "how did you get hired" and the answers more likely than not often are along the lines of:
"Well, I wasn't really a big fan growing up. I was aware of them, but they were just there in the background. I didn't have cable so i didn't watch them. I knew (either Tim Beedle, Joe LeFavi or some other editor or higher-up muckity-muck) because we worked together on such-and-such or knew (Beedle/LeFavi/etc) from when we did this-or-that and they suggested I work on the line. Once i got the job i ordered all the episodes off Netflex/watched the dvds/spend hours on YouTube doing research..."
In a nutshell, it almost always seems like all the people hired to write or draw the comics - regardless of how well they knew or loved the property were all essentially brought on due to having had some kind of pre-existing relationship with one of TPTB. The whole operation of artists seems to all have generated via the "it's not what you know, it's who you know" axiom.
Now i can't draw to save my life (although when i was a kid when i DID draw, it was always Muppets - i always had to throw in a Muppet in each art class project some way or other to where it became my "calling card" - but i digress) - the skill of translating images in my head to a canvas or paper with my hands was never in my artistic skillset the way acting, singing, puppetry and the performing arts have been. But if i was a really skilled artist - and i know there are a LARGE number of major Muppet Freaks who not only have the talent but took courses, somehow trained or looked toward making it more than a hobby - i would really be largely offended by this. Actually, probably because there ARE so many of the aforementioned true lifelong fanatics with training/education/skills and have had experiences like Reeves where he created something astounding that Disney won't even so much as look at or use as a glass coaster get snubbed, is why i get really irritated and put-off by this. If anyone tried to go through traditional channels, they most likely would just be ignored/rejected.
Now if the resulting project was really bad, i would be steam-eminating-from-the-ears FURIOUS. Thankfully, the writers and artists bringing us Muppet and Fraggle comics have lived up to their respective tasks but just think of how even more awesome these would be if they were coming from artists who live, eat, and breathe Muppets and Fraggles - who could draw them in their sleep due to a lifetime of experience and not having to do emergency Netflix cram sessions?
It just really grates on me and rubs me the wrong way when month after month, over and over again, i read all these interviews with people who basically say they got the honored privilage of working on the Fraggle/Muppet comics not because they love the brand or even tried to get hired or sought them out but because The Right Person knew them from something else and approached them - there's a sad and rather disgusting and insulting pattern of people hired who got there not because they had the initial desire and sought after it but were hand-picked due to an outside factor and were handed the Keys to the Kingdom.
Personally, if i was a Fraggle/Muppet lover that had an earnest genuine desire to work on the brand, i would give up any and all traditional means of submission and work on trying to become Tim Beedle's bowling buddy or Joe LeFavi's windshield wiper or flirting up a storm with them at their favorite bar (and if they were straight, doing so in drag). I love the Muppet/Fraggle comics dearly but the constant stream of revelations about how each artist was hired is really just leaving me with a sour taste in my mouth especially given how much it seems like a constant broken-record-style pattern with little variation each go-around.