Monday, April 17, 2006

Rejection, Rejection, Rejection



It's bad enough when the mailman comes by and there are a couple of envelopes full of rejected cartoons. But at least I'm experiencing the humiliation of rejection without anyone else around.

No more.

For a couple years, there has been something called The Rejection Show. It started as small event. Now, rejected cartoonists, writers and actor get together and show their rejected works on stage. And people pay to see it. Jon Friedman runs the show. More info. here.

Here's a description from the AOL Cityguide:
It's the best of the rest, so to speak; a showcase of comedians turned down by Conan O'Brien, rejected television writers, and cartoonists who find more SASEs in their mailboxes than checks. ... They are cartoonists for The New Yorker, writers for Comedy Central and working actors. Oftentimes material is turned down because it's too weird or too risque -- not necessarily because the work is poor.
Such a big hit this Rejection Show has been that Simon & Schuster will publish THE REJECTION SHOW BOOK in 2007.

So, I received a mass e-mail, asking if I'd send in some rejected cartoons. So I did. A couple weeks later (go ahead, say it with me), I was rejected by THE REJECTION SHOW BOOK! Ha ha ha!

It was, what I call a "good" rejection: a personal e-mail letting me know that the editor liked what I sent; it was close, but no cigar, etc. And I was competing with a lot of other cartoonists.

Anyway, if any publisher's interested, I'll edit a book for 2007 called REJECTIONS FROM THE REJECTION SHOW: WAY TOO WEIRD AND RISQUE FOR ANYONE AT ALL. And we'll seal it in plastic and make people buy it before they can see the inside like that Madonna SEX book. Yeah, that's it. Like the SEX book. Yeah. And it'll make a million! And we'll all buy islands and wear little jaunty blue blazers and sailor caps like Thurston Howell IIII!


All kidding aside, I know some really talented people who have been rejected and it was tough competition to get into the book. No hard feelings.

Wednesday, April 05, 2006

Mike Lynch Cartoons

There is more Mike Lynch Cartoons blog at MySpace.

Added June 9, 2006: MySpace has been wonky this week, so I may be moving to Blogger.