Seth

Jasper the Bear is out of hibernation: A Canadian icon returns

Maclean’s artist Jim Simpkins gets another moment in the sun along with his famous creation, Jasper

A preacher of cartoons delivers his sermons

Inside the legendary cartoonist’s curated ‘post-war Canadian drab’ home

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Didn’t This Already Happen in 2001?

More nostalgia for the early part of this century: remember when web-only cartoons were going to be the big thing? When writers for The Simpsons and other shows were signing deals to create things like web-only episodes of The Critic? And then we actually saw the web-only episodes and got turned off by the fact that a) The animation sucked, b) Most of our favourite characters weren’t there, and c) The episodes only lasted two minutes? And then the companies went bust? Well, that’s happening again, except for the part about the companies going bust. I don’t think Google’s going to go bust, and Google is the company that seems to be most interested in the potential of web-only content. (As opposed to most webisodes, which are made to tie in with shows that are running on the networks; even if you don’t buy the networks’ insistence that these features are merely “promotional,” they’re not really self-contained works that are supposed to stand on their own.