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Online and Subversive
by Jon Brooks
Wed, December 12, 2007, 8:00 am PST

About a month after September 11, many people were delighted, some shocked, and not a few offended to find someone had forwarded them the latest exponentially spreading Web phenomenon: an online comic strip starring a handful of savagely sarcastic office workers engaged in flippant and profane discussions about the current events of the time.

The first panels featured a clip art representation of a Dan Quayle-ish business executive intoning over the phone, "Oh yeah! Operation Enduring Freedom is in the house!" The response from his clip-art compatriot, an equally dapper African American on the other end of the line, repeats the line and adds some extra punch better not repeated here.

Thus the tone was set for "Get Your War On," a comic strip the New York Times has called "a textbook illustration of the viral reach of the Web." The vaunted paper titled the article, "Like Dilbert, but Subversive and Online." And in case you haven't already gotten the idea, we'd like to warn you: If you're uncomfortable with subversive and online, don't venture further.

"Get You War On" has since spawned two book collections, a regular run in "Rolling Stone," and a theatrical play. The satirist behind this Internet success story is 35-year old David Rees, a former temp worker who had created a pair of absurdist comic strips before September 11th jolted him into more controversial—and politically relevant—territory. David recently answered some questions for us over email.

Hey, Dave. What prompted you to start Get You War On?

I was skeptical that we could win a War on Terror, and I didn't see anything in President Bush that suggested he'd make a good leader for a never-ending battle between good and evil. I also thought bombing the s*** out of Afghanistan seemed kind of short-sighted. People were excited about the bombing, but not so much the humanitarian follow-up.

How do you put the strips together? Where do the images come from?

I make the comics on my computer. Most of the images are from Dover collections of public domain clip art. Every so often I modify an image to ratchet up the visual intensity of the comic to unbearable levels.

A lot of the graphics are used over and over again. How many different image panels are there in total?

I would say that 99% of the comic is composed of the same five pieces of clip art:

  1. White guy talking on phone while looking at his notebooks
  2. Black guy talking on the phone while wondering why his computer is so outdated
  3. Black woman talking on the phone with her head tilted at a rakish, sardonic angle
  4. White guy talking on phone while leaning forward with unbridled enthusiasm
  5. Three people in kitchenette smiling and discussing a donut the Asian lady is holding

Do you do any drawing?

Sometimes I doodle when I talk on the phone. I can provide representative doodles if you don't believe me. [We believe him.]

Has any of the dialogue actually been overheard?

The first GYWO comic, "Operation Enduring Freedom is in the house," was a conversation my friend and I had on the phone.

It's not always easy to pigeonhole the characters' politics. Are they callous reactionaries, deeply sarcastic liberals, or just terrified citizens reacting to a series of incredible events?

All of the above.

What's the proportion of hate mail to fan mail?

90/10 love/hate.

How are your two other strips doing: "My New Fighting Technique is Unstoppable" and "My New Filing Technique is Unstoppable"?

I made the first Fighting Technique comics before 9/11. They reflect America's innocence, before we were forced into adulthood by Y2K and the 9/11 attacks. At this point, "Fighting Technique" and "Filing Technique" are both hanging on for dear life.

What are your influences? Tom Tomorrow?

Stand-up comedy and punk rock are probably the two biggest influences. I love Tom Tomorrow, but I think our writing styles are different (and he makes his own images, in a deliberately clip-art style). He is more talented than I am, so I'm flattered to be in his company.

Given up your day job yet?

I am a professional cartoonist. I used to do freelance fact-checking for Martha Stewart Weddings magazine, but ever since Rolling Stone hired me to make GYWO in January 2003, I've been able to eke out a living with freelance cartooning work.

Okay. Finally, what's up with that weird domain, www.mnftiu.cc?

The .cc domain extension is the country extension for the Cocos (Keeling) Islands (like how .ca is the country extension for Canada). The Cocos Islands are in the Indian Ocean. I thought the domain looked cooler and more mysterious than .com.

Thanks, Dave! See you in the (online) funny pages.

comments

Posted by bessemerlaw | Fri, April 18, 2008, 10:07 am PDT

I'd like to be able to say that it is not funny because I am offended in some way. However, all I can truthfully say is that it is just not funny. It's not even a little bit funny. It is like the serious first half of a joke before you get to the punchline. Amazing what somebody can make a living doing. Good for him for getting paid for doing nothing.

Posted by bentrider1957 | Fri, April 18, 2008, 11:01 am PDT

@JJ Webb: Grow up. If you don't like the views expressed go to your little Jebus site and suck it.

Posted by hardwurkindaddy | Fri, April 18, 2008, 5:48 pm PDT

To that one large mouth in the tiny head above...facts and figures can be manipulated to say whatever the hell you want them to say. Mouthing off like you do not only proves very little, it exposes your level of intelligence.By the way, just go ahead and try to oust me from the country that I love dearly enough to die for it. You may be nine peace loving beatiniks, but I have enough in my clip for every one of you. Legally! Thank God there are still states where people like me have laws like that!

Posted by pixelcrash | Fri, April 18, 2008, 6:09 pm PDT

blah blah blah.......
me and my truck.
me and my gun.
sad

Posted by navalmanuvers | Sat, April 19, 2008, 7:21 am PDT

Love the strip, sarcasim is the last refuge for a world gone mad. And to the guy who thinks faith is all that important. Get a life. Only a truely brainwashed religious would come up with the lame remark ," Faith makes no sense to the faithless." Oh, please, faith is the mechcanism that the brain uses to keep you alive...it's neurological dumb, dumb. When you die It's over. So live your life to the fullest and with dignity that's the only faith you need to have.

Posted by gregbugaj | Thu, May 01, 2008, 7:45 pm PDT

I like the message the cartoons portray but for his information not every person that goes to war like Marines, Army etc are stupid. I was a Corporal and I have Computer science degree.

BTW Marines Rule

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