It took me a while to transcribe, but better late than never hit.
On 28 may, I sat down with Pete Abrams at the conquest SF Convention in Kansas City for an interview about his webcomic, Sluggy Freelance. Sluggy is rare that it is relatively few comic provides his artist's entire living, and it has been in operation for more than 14 years (13 as the interview).
Abrams has already interviewed a number of places, and I tried to avoid, for the same area as the others. Further, I wanted to get to, as he was able to make giving away a life of his comic free over the Internet if so to do a few other able been.
I will be running this interview in three parts from today.
Me: So, for the first part of this interview: it is this whole thing now goes beyond Paywalls in the electronic newspaper industry. Everyone is complaining about how content giving away for free to kill the newspaper of industry and so on. Have a life content away for free for more than ten years.
When did you first think that it would be possible for you to Sluggy Freelance as a full time to do paying job?
Pete: Now when I started Sluggy Freelance, nothing was comic as it is now. I think there were very few strips in existence. It was to me someone to compare other strips and question, if I do a living it or how long it would take could make me. When I started, I knew that two to three years took most companies are profitable – I heard that at some point. And when I started the Strip, I have it daily and I dealt with it, as it was my job before it full-time paid me.
And enough what happened was certain of the third year I suddenly began to make a profit and could me at this point to support, and it grows since profitability every year since then. So I know a living if I make do it or how long it would take could, because there was no business model may compare it.
Me: What challenges have face get started?
Pete: It is an interesting question. It's hard to put my brain almost thirteen years back, what was I provide. I know one stressing my biggest attempted Sunday comic strip by a dial upload-each other JPEG kept the damage to the server went and I had to upload it 18 times again. I remember many times cursing and about the scream.
Me: It was tough survivors two years or so until Sluggy was profitable?
Pete: Oh no. I was in a very good situation, because I Web design was doing - I was doing it free and I had a number of clients. Were the invoices and pay, and it was a good thing. What happened was that as Sluggy I simply grew, the balance could reach down more and more jobs turn and art.
In contrast to "normal" people with "real" jobs, where, if you choose, with their Web comic making a transition to life, you have to stop their 9 to 5 and cross your fingers, was I able to do a gradual shift in the inside, so it was never an unpleasant situation. I'm happy in a variety of ways.
Me: It changed the experience of writing and drawing for you to know out only if you loose could not got bored with it? This was is it something had to do to keep and could not relax or just stop if you bored?
Pete: I suppose I know loosely off until today, I could if I get bored — it's because I set my own rules. At some point I didn't know I could not stop to do it because I can't. I control everything that goes on the site 100%. I could stop the comics of tomorrow, or I could move all anime, I could do what I want. I have this freedom. But I have my own personal rules and throats, the I kind of put me and I see no reason it messed up going.
Me: It was always difficult to keep up 13 years for you?
Pete: A lot people ask, where the ideas come from, and you usually framework the question in this sense: How do you keep coming up with stuff after all these years. I play always Found…there's, always as much was to universe with in the Sluggy.
In a variety of ways almost you train what to expect from you, so that all people who do the strips are based on IT or video games or something like that - lock themselves in a specific type of genre, founded while I pretty much from the get go, I in any direction could go your readership. That gave me a flexibility that means every time, when there is a blank piece of paper before me, it's exciting for me because I can go anywhere. Tarzan is I can. I can do Wild West. I can do video games. I can do it I explore what I am really interested in that moment and that it keeps continuous fresh for me.
Now your specific question said, it's hard to keep it all these years and keep the problem I run into atop the workload, so a new strip contents are everyday with sketch on weekends, the strips are still where I want to be up to par. It just seems as I get older, life and family events and other things seem to make hard for me to keep my schedule. That is, I have to run mass or hopefully I find something like visiting artists are much better than my filler material.
But yes, is that every year become harder. But the concepts and writing and the love of work — absolutely not. It has been fantastic, since it began and still love it.
[To be continued!]
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