October 19, 2013  [Real Clear]
 
 
 
Mental Floss Exclusive: Our Interview with Bill Watterson  ! 





 
 
 



 
 
 
_the mag_ (http://mentalfloss.com/authors/the-mag) , _Jake  Rossen_ 
(http://mentalfloss.com/authors/jake-rossen) 




 
 
 
For the December issue of mental_floss magazine, Jake Rossen managed to do  
something we thought was impossible—he snagged an interview with the 
legendary  Bill Watterson! Since we’re guessing there are a few Calvin and 
Hobbes  
enthusiasts in the audience, we thought we’d provide a glimpse of the 
e-mail  exchange. For our full story on the comic strip, be sure to _pick up  
the 
print magazine_ 
(https://secure.palmcoastd.com/pcd/eSv?iMagId=20501&i4Ky=ISJ1) . 
There is a tendency to rehash and regurgitate properties with sequels  and 
remakes. You had an idea, executed it, then moved on. And you ignored the  
clamor for more. Why is it so hard for readers to let go?
Well,  coming at a new work requires a certain amount of patience and 
energy, and  there’s always the risk of disappointment. You can’t really blame 
people for  preferring more of what they already know and like. The 
trade-off, of course, is  that predictability is boring. Repetition is the 
death of 
magic. 
Years ago, you hadn’t quite dismissed the notion of animating the  strip. 
Are you a fan of Pixar? Does their competency ever make the idea of  
animating your creations more palatable?
The visual sophistication  of Pixar blows me away, but I have zero interest 
in animating Calvin and Hobbes.  If you’ve ever compared a film to a novel 
it’s based on, you know the novel gets  bludgeoned. It’s inevitable, 
because different media have different strengths  and needs, and when you make 
a 
movie, the movie’s needs get served. As a comic  strip, Calvin and Hobbes 
works exactly the way I intended it to. There’s no  upside for me in adapting 
it. 
Your fight over protecting Calvin and Hobbes from licensing deals,  and 
your battle to increase the real estate for your Sunday page comic, were  
notable—partially because they indicated your incredible autonomy over your  
work. Had you "lost" those battles, it appears you would have ended the strip.  
It reminds me of Howard Roark and his desire to blow up his building rather 
than  see it molested by other hands. Was there a critical moment in your 
career that  instilled such unwavering creative integrity?
Just to be clear, I  did not have incredible autonomy until afterward. I 
had signed most of my rights  away in order to get syndicated, so I had no 
control over what happened to my  own work, and I had no legal position to 
argue anything. I could not take the  strip with me if I quit, or even prevent 
the syndicate from replacing me, so I  was truly scared I was going to lose 
everything I cared about either way. I made  a lot of impassioned arguments 
for why a work of art should reflect the ideas  and beliefs of its creator, 
but the simple fact was that my contract made that  issue irrelevant. It was 
a grim, sad time. Desperation makes a person do crazy  things. 
Where do you think the comic strip fits in today’s  culture?
Personally, I like paper and ink better than glowing  pixels, but to each 
his own. Obviously the role of comics is changing very fast.  On the one 
hand, I don’t think comics have ever been more widely accepted or  taken as 
seriously as they are now. On the other hand, the mass media is  
disintegrating, 
and audiences are atomizing. I suspect comics will have less  widespread 
cultural impact and make a lot less money. I’m old enough to find all  this 
unsettling, but the world moves on. All the new media will inevitably  change 
the look, function, and maybe even the purpose of comics, but comics are  
vibrant and versatile, so I think they’ll continue to find relevance one way 
or  another. But they definitely won’t be the same as what I grew up with. 
I’m assuming you’ve gotten wind of people animating your strip for  
YouTube? Did you ever mimic cartoonists you admired before finding your own  
style?
Every artist learns through imitation, but I rather doubt the  aim of these 
things is artistic development. I assume they’re either homages or  satiric 
riffs, and are not intended to be taken too seriously as works in their  
own right. Otherwise I should be talking to a copyright lawyer. 
Is it possible some new form of sequential art is waiting to be  
discovered? Could the four-panel template die out as newspapers  dwindle?
Form follows function, as the architects say. With words  and pictures, you 
can do just about anything. 
According to your collection introductions, you took up painting  after the 
strip ended. Why don’t you exhibit the work?
My first  problem is that I don’t paint ambitiously. It’s all catch and 
release—just tiny  fish that aren’t really worth the trouble to clean and 
cook. But yes, my second  problem is that Calvin and Hobbes created a level of 
attention and expectation  that I don't know how to process. 
Purely for trivia and posterity’s sake, if you could indulge some  (even 
more) inane queries: One story that’s made the rounds is that a plush toy  
manufacturer once delivered a box of Hobbes dolls to you unsolicited, which you 
 promptly set ablaze. For people who share your low opinion of 
merchandising,  this is a fairly delightful story. Did it actually happen?
Not  exactly. It was only my head that burst into flames. 
I once read a mention of you producing some original art intended for  a 
Rolling Stone cover story that “went south.” Considering your  preference for 
privacy, an invasive profile sounds like anathema. Was this very  early on 
in the strip’s run?
Boy, I barely remember this. I think  that was the interview that ended up 
in The Comics Journal. It was  early, when my desire to air my grievances 
with the business temporarily  outweighed my desire for privacy. 
Owing to spite or just a foul mood, have you ever peeled one of those  
stupid Calvin stickers off of a pickup truck?
I figure that, long  after the strip is forgotten, those decals are my 
ticket to  immortality.




Read the full text here: 
http://mentalfloss.com/article/53216/mental-floss-exclusive-our-interview-bill-watterson#ixzz2iBzoMv1f
  
--brought to you by mental_floss! 

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