Obama Sworn In (twice), Diamond Porks Indie Comics

Oh hey, Look! Atomic Robo 3.1 (Atomic Robo & The Shadow from Beyond Time) is available for pre-order . . apparantly. I guess I’d better hurry the hell up and finish 3.2.

Now that the presidential inauguration is over I’m kind of at a lose for what to do. In the time following Obaba’s win and last Tuesday I could go to any NPR website, CNN, or MSNBC and have a 90% chance of hearing Obabma’s lastest press conference or blog video. At the very least I could be assured of finding a bunch of talking heads discussing what they though Obama would and should do when he finally took office.  It hasn’t gotten this bad yet, but I am feeling sort of sad without all the Obama talk. Now that he’s President no one seems to care. I guess it’s just more fun to speculate on his future actions that report what he is actually doing right now. Sort of like how fantasy football is a hundred times more interesting than real football.

I watched the inauguration  -that was a first for me. I’ve never liked a president enough to give a shit. Way to go Judge Roberts -how do you muff up the oath? They had to do it a second time later on just to be safe. Did you know that Calvin Coolidge was sworn in by his father (a J.P. and Notery Public) in the family general store up in Vermont? Coolidge and his style of of laissez-faire government was in many ways responsible for the giant kick in the nuts America suffered when the Great Depression hit, though it’s Hoover who always gets the blame -even though he, like Obama, came to office after the damage was done. Anyway I digress . . .

The funniest Twitter of the inauguration came from Matt Fraction: “I heard that the second Obama’s hand touches that koran Dick Cheney’s going to turn into a cluster of bats.” alas, there were no bats. But Dick was rolled out in a wheelchair -I guess he hurt his back packing up the shadow government command bunker. Georgie Boy looked miserable the entire time. I found my old anger sort of gone, replaced by pity. Like Frodo finally understanding why Golem was the way he was.

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In unrelated news, Diamond Distributers, the monopoly that controls the distribution of comic books in America, is changing the way it does business -much to the detriment of small publishers. Now I have never been a fan of Diamond. I could give you several dozen specific examples of how their way of operating screwed me, Brian, and Red5 Comics out of Robo sales. However, I wanted to write a well informed rant and I spent a lot of time reading up on this. I then spent several hours trying to write something worth reading -And then Clevinger went and wrote almost all the same stuff, but in a much more articulate manner. What can I say? He’s a writer. So I’m going to turn the blog over to Brian Clevinger, (recently praised by CBR for his awesomosity with words), for a minute:

If you follow print comics at all, then you probably already know about Diamond’s Big News. The short version is that they’re increasing the minimum amount a title must earn in order for Diamond to continue carrying it. This makes good economic sense for Diamond, but it’s unquestionably going to destroy independent comics publishing as we know it. The first third of this article goes into a little more depth on the issue, but basically when the monopolistic distribution system makes it mathematically impossible for the majority of independent publishers (and all yet-to-be-founded independent publishers) to be distributed, that’s it. Game over.

Let me put it plainly. The basic model of getting new independent comics into shops is dead.

Oh, it’ll do fine for Marvel, DC, Image, Dark Horse, IDW, and maybe one or two others. But everyone else? Everyone out there working on a new project for publication right now? The old model no longer applies.

The good news is that this isn’t bad news.

I’d been wondering when comics would go digital since around 2002. That’s when 8BT officially became my job. I started going to conventions and the difference between webcomic money and small press money was so obscene it made me feel bad. Seriously. I was making more money by giving away my comic online than everyone I ever saw who self-published their comics or who went through smaller independent publishers and Diamond. It’s a basic question of overhead. If you print, you have to pay to print the comics; to ship the comics; to store the comics; to ship the comics again to Diamond, or the retailer, or the customer. And that cover price? I know the customer feels like $2.99 is a bit much for one issue (nevermind the $3.99 that will become the standard price later this year), but that’s got to toward paying the printer, the shipping, the storage, the shipping again, Diamond, and the retailer. What pittance is left over is then split between the creative team and the publisher. That’s a lot of ways to slice $3 especially since the retailer alone keeps $1.50. And mind you, this is if you get a sale. Print comics customers are not merely inclined to not buy things they don’t already buy, they actively fight it. Good luck out there!

Let’s compare that to the cost of distributing a webcomic. You pay about $20/year for a domain name and then a monthly fee for bandwidth, the cost of which will range from negligible to obscene. If you don’t have much traffic, then chances are you can afford to swallow bandwidth costs through your own disposable income. That alone is a huge advantage over producing a print run that barely sells (no matter how small the print run) — you’re still out all those printing, shipping, and storage costs that don’t exist for a webcomic. If your traffic starts to increase, then yeah, your bandwidth costs will go up. But it’ll always be a cost you can make disappear by selling sketches, original pages, and/or advertising space. Any revenue beyond covering those costs (plus art supplies where needed) goes straight to the creative team. No retailer. No Diamond. No publisher. And this doesn’t even get into the revenue you can generate through merchandising or print collections once you have an established pre-order-hungry audience. It’s just insane.

Basically: there was no reason to go into print. The only difference is that it’s now official Diamond policy to laugh at you for trying.

One might look at the above and ask, “Brian, if you love webcomics so much, then why did you go into print with Atomic Robo?” Mostly, I think it was the need for 1. legitimization followed by a little bit of 2. ignorance and 3. arrogance. In more detail:

1. 8-bit is basically a work of piracy and it has no future beyond exactly what it is: some free online comics. Having sunk my entire adult life into producing it, I felt that whatever came next needed an external source of legitimization to be taken seriously as an intellectual property with any kind of future. Not because web based properties are not on their own legitimate (look no further than Penny Arcade, PvP, Applegeeks, and on and on), but it tends to take individual online titles longer to establish that legitimacy than it does a print title. The assumption is that if a work is published, then a certain baseline level of quality and marketability has been vouched for, so the property in question is a safer investment from external sources. A webcomic needs to prove it has that, and it can only do so if given enough time (again, look at how long it took PA, PvP, AG, etc. to find traction outside the internet: years). It’s the difference between looking for something to read at Barnes and Noble and fanfiction.net. I already put in/wasted my years of webcomic time, I couldn’t afford to start all over at thirty.

2. Though I knew webcomics require far less overhead to produce, I failed to anticipate just how great the gulf really is between the online and print markets.

3. I figured more 8-bit readers would pay a trivial amount for a physical product of new content from an author whose work they enjoyed. Individual issue sales for Atomic Robo are high for a book of its position in the print market, but not so high to require significant sales from 8BT-readers to explain them. Even if we assume most of those sales are from 8-bit readers, and realistically they aren’t, that inflated number would still only represent less than one percent of the 8BT-reading audience. Then again, someone’s buying the trade like crazy, maybe it’s them?

But, hey, this is business. The death of one model is the birth of a new one. Quoting myself from Oct ‘07:

The music industry fought to keep distribution the same after mp3s hit and in doing so they gave iTunes the opportunity to make billions. The numbers are smaller in the comics industry, but Diamond brings in $500 million every year. Even a piece of that is nothing to sneeze at should a small team of software developers swoop in and do for comics what Diamond could have done five years ago. In their fight to keep their jobs, Diamond and the mail order shops are going to let someone else make the millions of dollars any one of them could have made by thinking ahead.”

Look at that, I predicted iVerse (with more info over here). I believe ComiXology is working toward including a similar service with their app, but don’t quote me on that. If we don’t see even more services in this direction as 2009 goes on, that’s just stupid.

I’m not saying iVerse is the future, or that their model will be a success for them or someone else. It’s just too early to make those kinds of calls. But it is an elegant and attractive alternative for indie publishers who are suddenly tasked by Diamond to increase their sales by a factor a two overnight.

If you’re a new creator, why should you seek to be listed with iVerse or a similar digital distribution network? They charge for your product when you could just as easily put up a website and release the same content for free and to a larger potential audience.

Well, remember my concerns about building legitimacy? You can do it much faster in print than you can online because there’s no minimum assured level of professionalism or quality in webcomics as a whole. An iVerse-like model is an interesting compromise between the advantages of both print and digital distribution — you can have the built-in legitimacy of the print network and the greatly reduced overhead of the digital network. Whether or not a given creator or team should seek to join an iVerse-like model or to strike out on their own is ultimately up to them. Both offer distinct advantages and disadvantages, you just gotta go with the one that best fits your project. The important thing is that Diamond is not the only game in town.

The future of comics may well depend on linking “comics” and “portability”. Portable mp3 players and the services that provide them content are such a huge success because of the inherent universality of music: you can listen to it without being occupied by it. I mean, are you mp3 player people are really listening to your music as anything other than background noise even 50% of the time? You can half-listen to a song in traffic without feeling cheated by the experience, but half-reading a comic on your drive to work is a great way to kill yourself.

So, y’know. There are hurdles for anything that’s “like iTunes, but comics.” But we’ll find ways around and over those hurdles. What’s important now is to attach the ideas of convenience and accessibility to comics; to make it feel as natural to read a comic on a portable screen as it is today to listen to music on a very tiny hard drive. The iPhone is a great way to plant those seeds, so it will only make sense for comics to become an integrated part of next generation phones and other portable, personal devices with big fancy screens.

It’s a weird time to be in the comics industry, but I think it will be a better industry for the changes that will come as a result of Diamond’s new policy. New business models will emerge and be explored. More content will be more available in more ways than has ever been possible. This is how an industry thrives.

Okay back to me (Scott). At the end of the day I understand why Diamond is doing this, and I am more excited by the possibilities than I am worried about the fate of indie comics. As I’ve said on many occasions, that while I LOVE the medium of comic books I think that most comics suck. I mean than objectively -the writing is flawed, the art is elementary, or there is something wrong with the colors and lettering. Usually it’s all four things. Do I feel bad that “Hillbilly Vampire Werewolf” or “Bikini Commandos” won’t be appearing in Diamond’s Previews magazine anymore? Hell no. Less garbage to clutter up the place, and more chance of comic shop owners actually seeing Atomic Robo. (It’s hard being one of the hundred titles wallowing at the back of Previews.) Do I worry that the next Bone, or Mouse Guard might get squashed by this? A little. But as Brian pointed out, there are other ways to show the public your work and if it is truly good then it will succeed.

One possible unforeseen side effect though; what about the comics that are made because their creators are so fed up with the ocean of bullshit they see on LCS shelves that they are driven to create their own book? Without all the crap, will those books still happen?

RANDOM SPLENDOR

-The Sneeze: Making Me Look Like A Good Parent. (Jan 9, 2009)

-All Car Commercials Should Be This Cool.

-Parkour: Darwins new tool.

-Super Useless Super Powers.

-An Open Letter from Doc Brown to Marty McFly.

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My friend Benn on his lunch break.

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Week four at the gym is beginning. Pounds Lost = 0. I do feel a LOT better, but seriously, who gives a fuck. It’s all about how you look, isn’t it?

Comments (15)

NickJanuary 25th, 2009 at 11:29 am

Wow, that was one SERIOUSLY cool Commercial . Thats probably the coolest commercial I have ever seen.

Anyway, damn. As a guy wanting to eventually break it into comics it does tick me off that diamond is pulling this. But as an avid-comic consumer, and web-comic addict I am excited to see how this new change will affect the way I read my comics and what will come in the future.

A friend of mine had once suggested that comic companies just go digital. Modest Monthly fee, online comics.

I remember Marvel having the first few issues of the Ultimate comics (Spider-Man, X-Men) along with others, up for free a few years back. It was cool cause I could just sit and read a few pages at a time and not have to worry about where, or what, I might spill on my comic..

Though I do love buying Physical issues, it will be interesting.

And I agree completely about Obama… It seems like now he’s sworn in, no one cares. I still care though, and I will try to follow what I can.

LindsayJanuary 25th, 2009 at 4:19 pm

Scott. Clearly Benn would be in the trunk. On a pile of manga.

Jessie LamJanuary 25th, 2009 at 10:52 pm

I tried reading the Heroes comic on the Nintendo DS. Cute and all, but 2.5 inches of screen might put some people off. Was a novel idea though. If it’s just putting out stuff for the NDS anybody can just package a book in CBR format and put the link up for grabs. Apparently even digital manga is being made available on the Wii in Japan. Reading comics on the television? I guess it’d be like flipping through storyboards in some blockbuster flick on dvd.

NickJanuary 26th, 2009 at 1:41 pm

I tried reading a few comics on my PSP… it was a slow, painstaking process…

scottJanuary 26th, 2009 at 3:39 pm

I think comics on NDS, Iphones, Blackberries, etc. appeal to the non-comic reading (but still geeky) public. Like the millions of people who read webcomics, but have never seen an issue of Superman.

John from WITWARJanuary 26th, 2009 at 3:57 pm

Personally, I can’t wait until Amazon releases a version of the Kindle that can display in full color. I’d love to be able to carry my entire comics library in something that size. Combine that with a Rhapsody/Netflix Instant-type subscription service and you’d never have to deal with the monetary or space costs of buying new comics!

Matt CJanuary 26th, 2009 at 4:12 pm

Why is there a picture of Dr. Steel dressed as a steampunk Lincoln?

TetsuboJanuary 26th, 2009 at 5:02 pm

Don’t worry Scott, we love you for your *inner* beauty.

I so want Diamond to go out of business. I’ve despised them for decades.

I’m not a fan of paying for online content. I’m not into pirating things mind you. I just don’t like paying for things I can’t tangibly hold. I have hope that print on demand will someday fill the gap left by Diamond. Maybe Lulu can pick up the slack and save print comics.

I also don’t like the Kindle model. You don’t actually own your books. Books are physical things. To me they are not just digital documents. I can read a book without electricity (at least half of the time). If I drop a book, I pick it up, dust it off and move on. Not so much with a really expensive e-reader. Who’s format might go out of style and make my ‘rented’ book unreadable. I own books from the 19th century, I can still read them without issue. And I can’t resell a ‘used’ copy of a Kindle book. I rarely pay more than $3 for a book, which I can then donate, give away or loan to a friend. Ask Scott, I’m his own personal library.

Mark StegbauerJanuary 26th, 2009 at 6:51 pm

Ahh, leave it to Diamond once again to both bend the comic industry over and not even buy it dinner, but then present it with ideas that can put Diamond in the slammer with infutable DNA evidence. Diamond is about making the world of comics their’s and their’s alone. They control how it gets distributed, now they control who gets distributed. Once everyone goes online, they’re done. Hopefully we’ll all live long enough to see it happen. I’ll buy the first round.

Lincoln with an arc projector? Booyah! Now there’s a comic.

scottJanuary 26th, 2009 at 8:29 pm

John -that would be very cool!

Matt -Holy crap that totally looks like Dr. Steel. “Build the Robots!”

Tetsubo - you know me better than most; my insides are much uglier than my outsides.

You’re also kind of a freak (in a good way) when it comes to books. Lets keep that in mind. But I do appreciate the fact that I can call you up and ask for a book about underwater basket weaving and you will have it.

I’m also not going to pay for a digital comic. My thought was that they should be free when online, and the money is made on other stuff -like a webcomic. Or later on with physical collected volumes.

Frankie B WashingtonJanuary 29th, 2009 at 5:42 pm

Hey Scott, here’s a wacky idea. What if someone created a (Amazon) Kindle like device - shaped like an actual comic book. This device would be loaded for full color capacity and operate on the principles like a MP3 player. Sure this Comic Book device would probably put you pack around a hundred bucks or so. But you , the reader would be able to download comic books on it for cheap prices.
Example : Red 5 Comics would have a download area on there site. I’m a collector of Atomic Robo- I can go on the site- pay .99 for a download and get Robo.
The amount of comic books stored on the device is limited to how much memory is packed in it.
It could work if the device had a bigger screen like a tablet.
Just a thought.

ScottJanuary 29th, 2009 at 6:19 pm

Yeah I like that. You make the all hip and trendy and they will sell like a mutha. Look at Iphones. No one needs an Iphone, but everyone wants one.

It would have to address Tetsubo’s concern about durability though. But that should be easy enough -the military has several shock resistant and waterproof tablets and laptops.

Brian M.January 29th, 2009 at 7:15 pm

I’m decidedly old school and will always prefer my comics in book form.

Frankie B WashingtonJanuary 30th, 2009 at 9:36 am

I’m old school as well Brian M. but having an electronic device to literally upload comics onto would be a boon for publishers and creators across the board. Not mentioning the amount of paper and ink that could be saved from not printing comics. I’m an artist and I do collect original artwork- I would definitely not like to go in a gallery or museum and see video screens on the wall. I think that the sale of original artwork should continue between those who are collectors and the artist.
On the other hand- Could you imagine how many people that Atomic Robo or any comic would be able to reach if it was a digital download. I don’t know if Scott and Brian are selling overseas yet but they could literally have a fan base stretching across the world.
They make a profit, the publisher makes a profit and the book garners a global appeal.
The digital age is a new frontier and I’ve seen a few examples of digital comics and it’s constantly advancing.
You never know- we might be on the cusp of a new comic book era.
’nuff said.

ScottJanuary 31st, 2009 at 6:26 pm

Digital comics are not for us old geriatric farts.

They are for the Future -of which we are not a part. (But I would still like to cash in on.)