Red Meat | |
---|---|
Author(s) | Max Cannon |
Website | redmeat |
Current status/schedule | Weekly |
Launch date | 1989 |
Genre(s) | Black comedy, Surreal comedy |
Red Meat is a three panel black-and-white comic strip by Max Cannon. First published in 1989, it has appeared in over 80 newspapers, mainly alternative weeklies and college papers in the United States and in other countries. It has been available online since November 1996.
A visual hallmark of the strip is the almost total lack of movement of the characters from panel to panel, [1] and a "featureless void" of no background. [2] Cannon has said that he wanted Red Meat "to have a look that was somewhere between clip art and arresting minimalism, so that the text was more important than the art itself". [3]
Lambiek's Comiclopedia describes Red Meat as "a collection of absurd and sometimes cruel comics". [4] In 1996, Cannon described the essence of the strip as
To make people laugh without whacking them over the head with a big stick, or having to address a political message. There's plenty of people out there that do that way better than I could. It's just something that's sort of funny, sort of not. It deals with the things people really do but they don't want to admit that they do or say. Harshness, sadism, freakiness, cruelty, you know, the essence of humor... I'm just trying to portray what I find ironic or humorous. And I do think a lot of that has to do with achieving inner peace, and seeing the irony of what goes on around you without judgment. [5]
Red Meat features unrelated "slug lines" at the top of each comic, which Canon explains as "That's just my own form of personal poetry. It's a little something extra for those who don't like comics, but who love the English language." In 2005, his favorites included "Plastic fruit for a starving nation" and "Official pace car of the apocalypse." [6]
Red Meat features an extensive cast of characters with unusual characteristics and personalities, described by Spike Magazine as "small town America, [populated] entirely with grotesques." [7] Many of the strip's human characters are 1950s caricatures, with Cannon commenting "Several of the characters are designed to have the look of late '50s, early 60s, real pleasant advertising art." [8]
Last strip was published on July 25, 2023. Until then, Red Meat had a weekly release schedule. In 1989, after extensive prompting by his friend Joe Forkan, Cannon began producing the strip on a Macintosh SE using Adobe Illustrator. [14] [22] It was initially published in 1989 by the Arizona Daily Wildcat , the student newspaper of the University of Arizona, though Cannon was no longer a student of the university at the time. [6] Two months later, it was picked up by the Tucson Weekly . [6] [8] Since then it has appeared over 80 publications, [6] including The Onion . [23] Red Meat is also available online, and has been published online since November 1996, [8] making it one of the oldest still-running webcomics.
On 4 June 2024, Max Cannon announced that he would be resuming publishing new strips as of July, following a "much-needed year off from the Red Meat strip after 33 years of producing a weekly comic." As of late August 2024, no new comics have been published.
Red Meat has been published in several other languages, including French, Italian, Spanish, Danish, and Finnish. Localisers have changed some details, such as the Finnish translation making Milkman Dan into a mailman. [6]
In 2009, Max Cannon urged his readers to contact the editors of their local alternative weekly papers in an effort to save the comics printed within. [24] In a move applauded by Tom Tomorrow, of the weekly strip This Modern World , Red Meat returned to the pages of OC Weekly in 2012 after having been dropped in 2009. [25]
At least three collections of the strips have been released:
Bill Griffith, writing in the Boston Globe , identified the strip as a noteworthy example of "compelling comics on newsprint" in 1996. [26] Matt Groening of Life in Hell , praised the strip with "In a culture full of sick, twisted, perverted art, Red Meat is up there at the top—it's that good." Spike Magazine described the strip as "a window into a parallel world that is uncomfortably close to the real one." [7] Writing in The New York Times , John Hodgman described the strip as "a bracing, bitter tonic — the antidote to comics-page malaise, albeit one that might kill before it cures" and said that it was typified by "the baroquely dark imaginings that make Cannon's work more than a tiresome anti-comic." [15]
The first Red Meat collection won a "Special Recognition/Wildcard" Firecracker Alternative Book Award in 1998. [27]
Max Cannon was born into a U.S. Air Force family (his father being a B-52 bomber pilot) [28] on 16 July 1962 in Hunstanton, England, and spent his early years in England and Italy, before moving to Tucson, Arizona in 1977. [14] [29] He attended the University of Arizona, majoring in fine arts. [28] Lambiek's Comiclopedia states that Cannon was born in England, [4] but the Tucson Weekly described him as a "native Tucsonan". [30]
Cannon is also creator of the eight-episode Comedy Central animated web show Shadow Rock, [23] which was based on the Red Meat strip. [31] He also contributed to Marvel's Strange Tales #2 & #3, writing stories with Spider-Man and the Fantastic Four, respectively. [32] In a 2009 interview, Cannon said that he taught college animation and was working on two screenplays and doing some preliminary writing on a graphic novel. [32] From 2008 to 2014 Canon worked as an instructor at the Southwest University of Visual Arts, [33] and from 2014 to 2016 he worked as an adjunct instructor at The Art Institute of Tucson. He has also been a hospital worker, and reported on his experiences during the COVID-19 pandemic. [34]
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