Leisure Town
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Leisure Town is a comic strip, created by Tristan A. Farnon, which features photographs of bendable toy figures digitally superposed onto separately photographed backgrounds to create each frame. While the "characters" are children's toys, the comics explore mature themes. The strip ran from 1997 to 2003 (although in a reduced format from 2001 to 2003); some limited additional content was published in what appears to have been a one-time event in 2005. The strip is still being published on the Internet, but no new content has been published since 2005.
Leisure Town gained some notoriety in 1997 when Farnon scanned Dilbert strips and changed the dialogue to become profane and often racist (the story was that a giraffe became irate in his office job and started creating the strips). Dilbert's lawyers came calling and the characters were replaced with stick figures; Farnon then reverted to the Dilbert versions, until the lawyers called again. The original Dilbert comics were restored a second time when the site was relaunched in March of 2005.
In 2002, Farnon discussed Leisure Town on CNN's NEXT@CNN show. CNN described Leisure Town as a "quirky, some would say twisted, photo comic [which was] nominated for a Webby Award two years ago, and has developed a cult following." Farnon described the financial difficulties of creating webcomics, saying "If I can support myself doing Leisure Town, I will be very surprised. You realize that when you make online comics, you're sort of folding up your product into a paper airplane and sailing it out the window, and who knows who's going to catch it."
[edit] References
- Crane, Jordan (April 2001). A Silly Little Coat Hanger for Fart Jokes: Talkin' Comics with Leisuretown.com's Tristan A Farnon. The Comics Journal, no. 232. Pg. 80-89
- Hattori, James (February 2, 2002). "NEXT@CNN 13:00". CNN, Transcript #020200CN.V30
- Pearson, Kali (January 19, 2002). "Net buskers have lots of freedom". The Gazette (Montreal, Quebec), Pg. W7.

