#panel redraw allegedly
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kayak-mayak · 3 months ago
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oh.... Skywarp, what have they done to you?
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dont know witch version i like more
click for better quality
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mystic-warriors · 28 days ago
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I bought what is (at least allegedly) the official story board for this Yokai Watch episode (music note EP008) I hope that link works if not then uhh idk.
so like i have no way of identifying if this is real or not but at the very least if it is some fake then shit man kudos to the scammer redrawing the whole ep I'm not even mad
I scanned the first segment for yall (only the first segment so far because theres a fuck ton of pages, i'll do the rest later) so like everyone say thaaank you mystic
if there's any big mistakes in the pdf sorry about that feel free to publicly shame me until i fix it
all the art in it is digital so i would not be surprised if all the pages are somewhere online for free with better quality anyone can print out but uhhh idk thats life
some pages/panels bellow VVVV
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kuu-stuff · 3 months ago
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05 April 2025
I drew so well last week and now I'm stressed all over again. It's exactly what I said before about the weight of expectation ... I just need to stop thinking about skills and just focus on my comics, it usually works way better than when I focus on the art. Well after my long weekend, I'm starting "This time I can share it with you" again and what is good with that is that I started it with the idea of making it ugly and quick, well it took only 2 parts for me to hyperfocus on making it look good again, but at least I can relax about it more than Contained, allegedly. I had to rewrite the scene too. I was going to be more wholesome and they seem to understand each other a little better, but it ended up staying kind of bleak, I suppose. But it's only the first chapter called "lonely world" so it make sense that they're still this appart, they know nothing about each other. Tho I still want to redraw a couple of panels on the last part, it seems rushed to me as I reread it. Mmmh... If I can stop worrying about the art, I could do the next 2 parts back to back and close that chapter. Then I'll do a part of Cherished Nightmares then Contained again. Then I'll try to finish this chapter of Contained then I'll be more or less free to take more time to start new chapters and maybe FINALLY work on Remnants of our memories again. Let's go let's gooo. ✰✶✰✶✰✶✰✶✰✶✰✶✰ I have pretty much nothing else to say. Heat, mosquitoes, bad sleep, humidity, random existential stress and more heat. Tomorrow is another day, or something.
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everettwilkinson · 8 years ago
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Gianforte wins Montana special election
With Scott Bland
The following newsletter is an abridged version of Campaign Pro’s Morning Score. For an earlier morning read on exponentially more races — and for a more comprehensive aggregation of the day’s most important campaign news — sign up for Campaign Pro today. (http://www.politicopro.com/proinfo)
Story Continued Below
SPECIAL RESULTS — “Gianforte wins Montana special election,” by Campaign Pro’s Elena Schneider: “Republican Greg Gianforte won Montana’s special House election Thursday night, beating Democrat Rob Quist a day after Gianforte was charged with assault for allegedly attacking a reporter covering his campaign. … Gianforte’s win preserved the GOP’s 24-seat edge in the House of Representatives, frustrating Democratic activists who poured money into Quist’s campaign and demanded more help from party groups that saw the uphill, red-state race as unwinnable. Gianforte, a technology executive, had 51 percent of the vote when The Associated Press called the race at about 10:30 p.m. Mountain Time. Quist, a folk singer and first-time candidate, had 44 percent of the vote. A Libertarian candidate, Mark Wicks, had 6 percent.
— “The hotly contested special election to replace Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke in Congress took a violent turn Wednesday night when Ben Jacobs, a reporter for The Guardian, asked about Gianforte’s reaction to the Congressional Budget Office score of the House Republican health care plan. Jacobs said Gianforte ‘body-slammed’ him and broke his glasses, an account which was corroborated by audio of the incident and eyewitness accounts from a Fox News reporting team in the room. … Republicans including House Speaker Paul Ryan and Montana Sen. Steve Daines called on Gianforte to apologize Thursday, which Gianforte did in a victory speech late Thursday night before supporters in Bozeman, Mont. When you make a mistake, you have to own up to it. That’s the Montana way,’ Gianforte said. ‘Last night I made a mistake and I took an action that I can’t take back. I’m not proud of what happened. I should not have responded in the way that I did and for that I am sorry.'”
— “… DCCC chairman Ben Ray Lujan said in a statement that Democrats intend to ‘compete hard for this seat’ in 2018. ‘Unfortunately, the alleged violent assault of an innocent reporter and subsequent criminal charges have tainted this election at the very end and further clarified that Greg Gianforte is unfit to represent Montana,’ Lujan continued. … National Republicans took the opportunity to swipe at House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, after linking Quist to her in TV ads painting him as too liberal for Montana. ‘Greg Gianforte will be the next congressman from Montana and Nancy Pelosi and liberals in Washington were rejected again,’ NRCC chairman Steve Stivers said in a statement.” Full story.
SENATE RECRUITING WATCH — Vance eyes Ohio, Hill looks at Indiana, Romney a no-go in Utah — “Key Republicans Are Encouraging Hillbilly Elegy Author J.D. Vance To Run For Senate In Ohio,” by BuzzFeed’s Henry J. Gomez: “The recruiting overtures reflect unease with the early GOP frontrunner, state Treasurer Josh Mandel, who is seeking a rematch with Democratic incumbent Sherrod Brown. Four sources with knowledge of the private encouragement confirmed the conversations to BuzzFeed News. They requested anonymity to speak freely about what could become another intra-party fight in a battleground state where Republicans are divided between those who embraced Donald Trump’s winning presidential campaign and those who didn’t.” Full story.
— “AG Hill, others taking look at [Indiana] Senate race,” by Howey Politics Indiana’s Brian Howey: “Informed and reliable GOP sources say that Attorney General Curtis Hill is making phone calls gauging support for a potential run. He is also staffing up his campaign side, with Suzie Jaworowski coming on board. She was a key player in President Trump’s Indiana campaign. Another name reportedly making calls is State Rep. Mike Braun, R-Jasper. … State Sen. Mike Delph told HPI on Wednesday that his oldest daughter Abby is getting married on June 25. “I will address 2018 after we get through this very important family event,” Delph advised.”
— Another Howey tidbit: “Messer is also gearing up for the U.S. Senate race, and that is igniting a field for replacement. … The new name surfacing here is Greg Pence, brother of Vice President Mike Pence.” Full story.
— “Hatch says Romney won’t run for his Senate seat,” by POLITICO’s Burgess Everett: “Sen. Orrin Hatch hasn’t made a final decision about whether he’ll run for reelection, but he’s adamant about one thing: Mitt Romney is not running for his Senate seat. … ‘I’ve talked to Mitt Romney. He’s not going to run for this seat. I would be glad for him if he would,’ Hatch told reporters.” Full story.
Days until the 2017 election: 167.
Days until the 2018 election: 531.
Thanks for joining us. You can email tips to the Campaign Pro team at [email protected], [email protected], [email protected] and [email protected].
You can also follow us on Twitter: @politicoscott, @ec_schneider, @politicokevin and @danielstrauss4.
PROGRAMMING NOTE — Due to the Memorial Day holiday, Morning Score will not publish on Monday, May 29. Our next Morning Score will publish on Tuesday, May 30.
OFF MESSAGE PODCAST BONUS EPISODE: Reps. Tom Reed (R-New York) and Josh Gottheimer (D-New Jersey) are co-chairs of the bipartisan effort to pass tax reform. The two sit down with Isaac Dovere in this week’s bonus episode of Off Message to share how they have made the case to their colleagues to pass the biggest tax reform package in history in an overwhelmingly partisan environment. Listen and subscribe: iTunes | Panoply | Stitcher
REDISTRICTING WATCH — “Fearing 2018 losses, Texas Republicans in Congress want special session on redistricting,” by The Texas Tribune’s Abby Livingston and Jim Malewitz: “Some Texas Republicans in Congress hope that any upcoming special session will include redrawing the state’s 36 congressional districts as part of its agenda. The message coming out of Austin thus far: not going to happen.Several congressional Republicans told the Tribune they want Abbott to call a special session to redraw the Congressional lines. They believe such a maneuver would put their allies in the state legislature in the driver’s seat, circumventing Republicans’ worst fear: that a panel of federal judges will draw a less favorable map of its own.” Full story.
ANNALS OF CAMPAIGN FINANCE — “Ted Cruz Failed to Show 2012 Loans From Goldman Sachs, FEC Says,” by Bloomberg’s Bill Allison: “U.S. Senator Ted Cruz improperly accounted for loans he received from Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and Citigroup Inc. during his 2012 campaign, saying the funds were his own personal contributions to the Senate race, the Federal Election Commission said Thursday. The finding, released on the FEC website, marked a rare instance of agreement among the agency’s five commissioners, who voted unanimously that the $1.1 million of loans from the banks should have been disclosed to voters. The FEC didn’t say whether there would be a penalty.” Full story.
2018 WATCH — “Welfare reformer Mary Mayhew leaving as commissioner of Maine DHHS,” by the Portland Press Herald’s Joe Lawlor: “Mary Mayhew is stepping down as commissioner of the Department of Health and Human Services after spending more than six years leading Gov. Paul LePage’s controversial push to reform Maine’s public safety net. As head of the state’s largest agency, Mayhew has been at the forefront of LePage’s bid to revamp programs that affect thousands of Mainers, including efforts to tighten requirements for Medicaid enrollees, re-establish work requirements for food stamps, clamp down on welfare fraud, and advocate for other changes, such as forbidding junk food purchases with food stamps. Mayhew gave a brief statement to assembled reporters Wednesday afternoon at DHHS headquarters in Augusta, but refused to take questions and did not address speculation that she will run for governor in 2018. Friday is her last day.” Full story.
— “Stacey Evans launches a HOPE-themed campaign for governor,” by the Atlanta Journal-Constitution’s Greg Bluestein: “The Smyrna attorney’s campaign sets up what will likely be a divisive Democratic primary for the state’s top job in 2018. House Minority Leader Stacey Abrams has also filed paperwork to run for governor and is expected to soon make a formal announcement. Evans said in an interview she is putting ‘hope’ – the scholarship and the concept – at the heart of her bid to replace a term-limited Nathan Deal. She has been one of the most forceful critics of the 2011 law he signed that slashed funding to the popular program. … The 39-year-old’s background will play a central role in her campaign. A child of a struggling teenage mom, the Ringgold native was the first in her family to graduate from college. She used her share in a massive whistleblower settlement to create a $500,000 scholarship for first-generation graduates at the University of Georgia’s law school.” Full story.
HOW IT HAPPENED — “How Alleged Russian Hacker Teamed Up With Florida GOP Operative,” by the Wall Street Journal’s Alexandra Berzon and Rob Berry: “The hacker also privately sent Democratic voter-turnout analyses to a Republican political operative in Florida named Aaron Nevins. Learning that hacker ‘Guccifer 2.0’ had tapped into a Democratic committee that helps House candidates, Mr. Nevins wrote to the hacker to say: ‘Feel free to send any Florida based information.’ Ten days later, Mr. Nevins received 2.5 gigabytes of Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee documents, some of which he posted on a blog called HelloFLA.com that he ran using a pseudonym. Soon after, the hacker sent a link to the blog article to Roger Stone, a longtime informal adviser to then-candidate Donald Trump, along with Mr. Nevins’ analysis of the hacked data.” Full story.
ADMINISTRATION SPEED READ — “Jared Kushner now a focus in Russia investigation,” by the Washington Post’s Matt Zapotosky, Sari Horwitz, Devlin Barrett and Adam Entous: “Investigators are focusing on a series of meetings held by Jared Kushner, President Trump’s son-in-law and an influential White House adviser, as part of their probe into Russian meddling in the 2016 election and related matters, according to people familiar with the investigation. Kushner, who held meetings in December with the Russian ambassador and a banker from Moscow, is being investigated because of the extent and nature of his interactions with the Russians, the people said.” Full story.
CODA — QUOTE OF THE DAY: “Last night I made a mistake and took an action that I can’t take back, and I’m not proud of what happened.” — Rep.-elect Greg Gianforte (R-Mont.), apologizing in his Thursday victory speech for the incident with Guardian reporter Ben Jacobs that resulted in Gianforte being charged with assault on Wednesday.
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nofomoartworld · 8 years ago
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Hyperallergic: How to Draw a (Picket) Line: Activists Protest Event at Boyle Heights Gallery
Protesters outside of 356 Mission on February 12 (photo by the author for Hyperallergic)
LOS ANGELES — A group of artists organizes an event, “a call to effective political action,” in order to bring together a network of art practitioners to address “the increasingly alarming executive actions, policy proposals, and the culture of fear, hatred, and exclusion” and “to affirm that art is not neutral.”
They schedule it at a location, 356 Mission, along the new gallery row in Boyle Heights, Los Angeles, which has been visibly mired in gentrification controversy for quite some time. They do not investigate the controversy or contact the local community activists who instigated the anti-gentrification protest. When met at the entrance to their own event by these same activists, they and a large number of audience members proceed to cross the picket line in order to hold this political event.
Save giving the activists a platform to say a few things, the event proceeds as scheduled Although, as reported from the inside, many participants sympathize with the protestors, and a committee is even formed to instigate dialogue, very few people step outside the doors to attempt a conversation. When a member of the art community known for her professional work as a mediator tries to intervene, she is told that the protestors have already been given their platform.
I arrive at the event fully intending to participate. At the scene I am met by a raucous picket line, one that I have been anticipating for over six months now. “Of course,” I say to myself, “here they are — the protestors — picketing the event inside.”
In many ways, I am a member of that “inside,” part of the Los Angeles intellectual and academic art world. I identify with the organizers and participants. On Sunday afternoon, I longed to join what promised to be a productive discussion about art and activism, organized by a group called the Artists’ Political Action Network. I nevertheless found myself at a threshold where I had to make a decision, and I decided not to enter — because, with all due respect, what possible art world event would merit crossing a picket line? Unless you strongly disagree with the position of the picketer, you just do not cross a picket line. That is activism 101.
Outside of 356 Mission, members of Defend Boyle Heights approached me and asked me not to step inside. I stayed and listened. I stayed and was convinced.
The galleries are acting as forces of gentrification, causing rents to rise and the local community to be displaced. Although much more could be said, this alone is reason to heed a request to boycott the galleries — they can go somewhere else. They’ll likely be doing just that in a year or two regardless, when the rents go up drastically. As a bibliography compiled by the activists shows, these arguments are well rehearsed. The paradox is that they’re also familiar to all of us art world participants on the inside.
And nevertheless, I stood there watching members of LA’s institutional art scene walk all over the picket line organized by Boyle Heights’ activists and artists.
Many were respectful enough to engage and apologize for walking in; several stopped on their way out to hear additional perspectives. But more than a few participants waved their fingers, scolded, and even attacked the protestors verbally. Some got angry at the audacity of the protestors to disrupt a well-intentioned political meeting. Most were likely oblivious to the cumulative effect their behavior had on the protestors.
I understand the frustration of the visitors: it’s hard to organize, to give up one’s time, to make things happen, and no one wants their work to be challenged. But communication has fallen between the cracks of good intentions, and it’s on us, the visitors, to stop and listen. A not-so-savvy choice of venue unleashed a contradiction that escalated because of a lack in flexibility. What would have happened if the panel and whole group had just stood up and stepped out? How is it possible that, in a room full of artists, not one idea emerged for how to approach the situation differently and more creatively? I had to choose a side. Now I am writing in the hopes that my colleagues will recognize that they could, and still can, redraw the line.
I was not alone outside. I overheard the voices of a number of artists who chose not to cross the line. They not only identified with the community, but saw their place in the vicious cycle and wondered aloud whether the quest for cheap studios is not itself a displacement machine. But artists also are forced out by gentrification. They face a very different prospect than making a profit at the direct expense of the local population, which is what the galleries do. So why is it that many artists still choose the side of the galleries and not the community? Here we must erase the imaginary lines of identification and redraw them, not because we are kindhearted or have seen the light, but because we realize on which side of the divide our best interests lie.
The group gathered inside 356 Mission (photo courtesy Defend Boyle Heights)
“I have no place in that world,” a protestor told me, in what was an informative and pleasant conversation, despite rumors that the picketers were confrontational. “But most of those people inside do not either,” I said. “The vast majority live under precarious conditions — they have no job, living, studio, or health care security.” My interlocutor nodded in recognition. Why does this art world crowd support a system in which only a handful of them will end up making a living by selling their art or landing a tenured job? If we really mean to come together in solidarity, how can we not take the protestors’ side?
Some event attendees complained about the unwillingness of the protestors to compromise and their allegedly hostile attitude. The paradox again is that the inside crowd knows the answer to every one of their own objections. Most of them have spent their careers deconstructing power; they know the protestors have a right to agitate, and they know that political speech is often intense. Are seasoned spectators of performance art really too sensitive to handle a megaphone or to entertain a provocation that might force them, for a few minutes, to check their privilege?
The organization and sheer tenacity of the protestors should have been enough to earn them the respect and ear of the art world. Instead, we arrived in their neighborhood and demand that they compromise. It is us who have miscalculated where the line should be drawn. The only question left is: where do you stand?
The post How to Draw a (Picket) Line: Activists Protest Event at Boyle Heights Gallery appeared first on Hyperallergic.
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