May 10, 2008

r.i.p “fred 42″

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I’m sad to report the pre­ma­ture death of my good friend, “Fred 42″.
This hap­pe­ned ear­lier today, when my pen explo­ded.
It hap­pens.
All is not lost. I already have a New Evil Plan. Hurrah! I’ll let you see it when it’s ready.
I spent about twenty minu­tes being really bum­med, then said, “To Hell with it. “Fred 43″ will be EVEN BETTER.“
It’s all good…

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11 Responses to “r.i.p “fred 42″”

  1. Bet Fred 42 sells for more than Fred43.

  2. Heming­way lost a satchel by lea­ving it in a Paris taxi. The bag was full of story drafts for which he had no other copies. One of his more senior wri­ter friends (I for­get which French wri­ter this was) told him not to worry about it; rew­rite the sto­ries from what he remem­be­red, and likely he’d remem­ber the best parts, so that the sto­ries would turn out even bet­ter.
    So, yes, expect Fred 43 to rock the Casbah …

  3. Rodrigo says:

    I don’t see the pro­blem at all. Great work. There is something in your art – do you mind me calling your car­toons art?! – that cap­ture my ima­gi­na­tion.
    When are you going to try colour?

  4. Mike says:

    > rew­rite the sto­ries from what he remem­be­red, and
    > likely he’d remem­ber the best parts, so that the
    > sto­ries would turn out even bet­ter.
    That usually works for tweets too. Some­ti­mes when I am strug­gling to dis­till something down to 140 the brow­ser refreshes for some rea­son or another and I lose what I was wri­ting. Then when I enter what I remem­be­red, it magi­cally fits in the cha­rac­ter limit.

  5. KG says:

    I’ll echo Robin’s com­ment: I bet it does sell for more. Why? It has a great artist story behind it: sweat and toil for days, almost-near vision per­fec­tion being reached near the end, and then BLAM! The pen explo­des!
    Disap­point­ment. Anger. Frus­tra­tion. Loss. Mour­ning. Growth. Rene­wel. A new begin­ning. And that’s where the truly great art is made — out of the ashes comes the phoe­nix!
    Never toss the mis­ta­kes. Put them in the vault. Auc­tion them off later as the catalysts for your other great pie­ces after they sell. This is a part of your per­so­nal art his­tory.
    Do you know the book “How to Sur­vive and Pros­per as an Artist” by Caroll Michels? You knows so much about sales and mar­ke­ting already that much of it might be a repeat of what you know. But it might be worth a skim — it has some very prac­ti­cal gems.

  6. ruurd says:

    I want to see pic­tu­res of the corpse… if that is what it is…

  7. Like others I bet the acci­dent inc­rea­sed the mar­ke­ta­bi­lity of Fred 42.
    What kind of pen was it so we can avoid pen shrapnel?

  8. Dave Armstrong says:

    My guess is that Dead Fred 42 is mar­ke­ta­ble. Have a sho­wing and a wine tas­ting with a silent auc­tion.
    Dave

  9. jim nellis says:

    Fred is dead.
    Long live Fred.

  10. Mary Wallace says:

    Fred 42 looks like he died a happy death!

  11. Catherine says:

    Huh????? I would buy dead Fred! Are you mad! I think it´s extra cool with that splash and then your name across it!!X