💼 Careercow Andrew Dobson (aka Tom Preston)

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At least he hasn't added the eye-bags on her... yet.

I went without my contact lenses today and scrolled through some Dobson art to see if I could correctly guess which unnecessary facial lines were of his doing and which were a result of my double vision. I overestimated the effect that the double vision was having, there were extra lines everywhere.
 
I would describe Asami as more anime like than usual. How is it the guy hates anime so much, but at the same time when he tries to draw western, it looks like out of an How to draw manga book? I bet he himself had one of these at college
He's claimed before that he learned and was taught to draw more anime-like, and that's what's kept him from working at Disney and such.

image.jpg


When I was a young adult I stumbled upon this wondrously new form of entertainment known as Japanimation. It was cartoons, but they were gritty, dark, sexy, ultra violent, and pretty much everything that American cartoons were not. At that point in my development I had been yearning for more “mature” content and was frustrated that American cartoons never really dealt with those themes. Anime also wasn’t popular at the time, so it was like being personally entitled to things others weren’t.

I quickly began mimicking Anime and Manga styles and adapting it into my very Disney-esque one. I drew that way for a long time, trying very hard to mimic Japanese comics right down to using a lot of their “unique” symbols such as snot bubbles and giant sweat drops, which were all new and unusual to us.

Then suddenly Anime and Manga hit a BOOM in America with the introduction of the Pokemon TV series and the Pokemon game phenomenon. TV stations quickly tried to pick up as many new Anime as possible, and before long almost all kids shows here were Anime, even if they weren’t meant to be for kids (like Escaflowne). Suddenly, my style didn’t look as unique anymore and I didn’t feel “special” for drawing Anime.

As I began re-experiencing more western comics and cartoons in college, I came to realize a lot of the problems with Anime and Manga. The lack of variety in facial features, the tendency to draw gritty-tough-as-nails-bad-ass men as efeminine “bishonen,” the need to have every girl have rainbow colored hair and giant eye pools you could drown in, the stereotypical cuteness and desire to be “innocent” slightly sexualized, etc etc. The more I looked at Anime and all the people around me imitating it, the more I realized that there are other styles and ways to draw things which are just as effective.

But try as I might, changing my style proved to be VERY difficult. I had been drawing Anime for so long that I didn’t know how to alter it without completely ruining the stuff I liked about all my characters. I realized that rather than learning the tools of the trade, I had forgone a lot of the technical knowledge I needed to draw in my efforts to copy a foreign style. Anime had, in fact, corrupted my ability to draw anything.

And it’s worse now than I ever dreamed it would be. Just take a peek at the frontpage of DA and see how much Anime and Manga influenced artwork gets attention and praise from everyone. It’s almost impossible to find artwork in a style which HASN’T in some way been influenced by Anime and Manga. I’m not trying to say that Anime and Manga is EVIL, but I do feel that we’ve become over-saturated with it to the point that it’s actually becoming detrimental to our collective growth as artists.

So yes... There is a bit of a hypocrisy going on here. Having me complain about Anime and Manga is hypocritical because I, too, was influenced by it (although I think you can see other styles in my work Anime and Manga was probably the biggest influence I had as a kid). But that doesn’t mean that I can’t recognize my own shortcomings and realize how much we desperately need to move away from Anime and Manga and create more individualized and personal drawing styles instead of just copying the norm.

And just for the record, if this were hypothetically reversed and Disney was more popular than Anime, I would be saying the same thing only about moving away from Disney. Its not specifically Anime and Manga I hate, it’s the over saturation effect it’s had on us and our artwork
 
Última edición:
He's claimed before that he learned and was taught to draw more anime-like, and that's what's kept him from working at Disney and such.

Ver archivo adjunto 43716

When I was a young adult I stumbled upon this wondrously new form of entertainment known as Japanimation. It was cartoons, but they were gritty, dark, sexy, ultra violent, and pretty much everything that American cartoons were not. At that point in my development I had been yearning for more “mature” content and was frustrated that American cartoons never really dealt with those themes. Anime also wasn’t popular at the time, so it was like being personally entitled to things others weren’t.

I quickly began mimicking Anime and Manga styles and adapting it into my very Disney-esque one. I drew that way for a long time, trying very hard to mimic Japanese comics right down to using a lot of their “unique” symbols such as snot bubbles and giant sweat drops, which were all new and unusual to us.

Then suddenly Anime and Manga hit a BOOM in America with the introduction of the Pokemon TV series and the Pokemon game phenomenon. TV stations quickly tried to pick up as many new Anime as possible, and before long almost all kids shows here were Anime, even if they weren’t meant to be for kids (like Escaflowne). Suddenly, my style didn’t look as unique anymore and I didn’t feel “special” for drawing Anime.

As I began re-experiencing more western comics and cartoons in college, I came to realize a lot of the problems with Anime and Manga. The lack of variety in facial features, the tendency to draw gritty-tough-as-nails-bad-ass men as efeminine “bishonen,” the need to have every girl have rainbow colored hair and giant eye pools you could drown in, the stereotypical cuteness and desire to be “innocent” slightly sexualized, etc etc. The more I looked at Anime and all the people around me imitating it, the more I realized that there are other styles and ways to draw things which are just as effective.

But try as I might, changing my style proved to be VERY difficult. I had been drawing Anime for so long that I didn’t know how to alter it without completely ruining the stuff I liked about all my characters. I realized that rather than learning the tools of the trade, I had forgone a lot of the technical knowledge I needed to draw in my efforts to copy a foreign style. Anime had, in fact, corrupted my ability to draw anything.

And it’s worse now than I ever dreamed it would be. Just take a peek at the frontpage of DA and see how much Anime and Manga influenced artwork gets attention and praise from everyone. It’s almost impossible to find artwork in a style which HASN’T in some way been influenced by Anime and Manga. I’m not trying to say that Anime and Manga is EVIL, but I do feel that we’ve become over-saturated with it to the point that it’s actually becoming detrimental to our collective growth as artists.

So yes... There is a bit of a hypocrisy going on here. Having me complain about Anime and Manga is hypocritical because I, too, was influenced by it (although I think you can see other styles in my work Anime and Manga was probably the biggest influence I had as a kid). But that doesn’t mean that I can’t recognize my own shortcomings and realize how much we desperately need to move away from Anime and Manga and create more individualized and personal drawing styles instead of just copying the norm.

And just for the record, if this were hypothetically reversed and Disney was more popular than Anime, I would be saying the same thing only about moving away from Disney. Its not specifically Anime and Manga I hate, it’s the over saturation effect it’s had on us and our artwork

And the reason why he hates Anime/Manga? His Anime club became fun and started bringing in terrible Japanese cartoons to laugh at and at one point, they riffed on one of his personal favourites.
 
Yeah. I don't have the link to the comic off the top of my head, but he made a SYAC where he addressed a OoT fan because he bashed OoT because it was "popular" and when the fan pointed out how retarded that is, he brought up Justin Beiber. The OoT fan proceeded to become a Dobson strawman and go all ballistic while Dobson was like "Oh you only hate him because he's populaaaarr!!"

Because he's a pedantic ass.
I think he's admitted that that comic was based on an actual conversation he had, but irl the other guy made a better point and he couldn't think of anything else to say at the time so he made the comic later when he thought of a "good" argument.
 
Última edición:
Wasn't he also for years on reacord of considering the Ocarina of Time game mediocre at best? Didn't he make comics where he insulted OoT fanboys?
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"This actually happened at my last convention. I was just chatting with a fan and made a comment about how hilarious I thought it was when people freak out over insanely trivial things (like the color of Link’s hair or my views on Ocarina of Time) when all of a sudden this guy jumped right into the conversation and accosted me before storming off. I’ve dealt with flame on the internet before, but it’s very rare to get it to my face and luckily it helped emphasize my point.

And before you ask, my OPINION is that Ocarina of Time is a great game, but not THE BEST Zelda game of all time the way many Zelda fans seem to hold it up on a pinnacle of greatness. I really don’t want to get into a discussion about this topic. I could’ve chosen a number of different “controversial” things to talk about, but the incident this comic is based off of was when I was talking about Ocarina of Time specifically.

Please, don’t flame me over my opinion. Please don’t even TALK about Ocarina of Time here since Ocarina of Time isn’t the POINT of this comic. The point is how people tend to freak out over trivial and stupid things. Honestly... I shouldn’t have to write that, but I KNOW someone isn’t going to read this and will try to start up an argument about Ocarina of "
 
I like how he tries to mock people like himself in the comic where he mentions right there that he's intentionally contrarian. You know, in spite of the fact that he quit anime to the point of gibbering rage because a group of people he knew in real life called the whack ass anime he liked gay.
 
The point is how people tend to freak out over trivial and stupid things.
Hey, Dobson. Remember when someone sent you an innocent critique of your artwork and you blocked them?

Remember when someone sent you a harmless picture of a spider and you blocked them?

Remember when I sent this Tweet to you:


and I was blocked immediately after?
 
Common sense is the anti-dobson, let's just make simple human tasks incredibly difficult!
 
He's claimed before that he learned and was taught to draw more anime-like, and that's what's kept him from working at Disney and such.

Ver archivo adjunto 43716

When I was a young adult I stumbled upon this wondrously new form of entertainment known as Japanimation. It was cartoons, but they were gritty, dark, sexy, ultra violent, and pretty much everything that American cartoons were not. At that point in my development I had been yearning for more “mature” content and was frustrated that American cartoons never really dealt with those themes. Anime also wasn’t popular at the time, so it was like being personally entitled to things others weren’t.

I quickly began mimicking Anime and Manga styles and adapting it into my very Disney-esque one. I drew that way for a long time, trying very hard to mimic Japanese comics right down to using a lot of their “unique” symbols such as snot bubbles and giant sweat drops, which were all new and unusual to us.

Then suddenly Anime and Manga hit a BOOM in America with the introduction of the Pokemon TV series and the Pokemon game phenomenon. TV stations quickly tried to pick up as many new Anime as possible, and before long almost all kids shows here were Anime, even if they weren’t meant to be for kids (like Escaflowne). Suddenly, my style didn’t look as unique anymore and I didn’t feel “special” for drawing Anime.

As I began re-experiencing more western comics and cartoons in college, I came to realize a lot of the problems with Anime and Manga. The lack of variety in facial features, the tendency to draw gritty-tough-as-nails-bad-ass men as efeminine “bishonen,” the need to have every girl have rainbow colored hair and giant eye pools you could drown in, the stereotypical cuteness and desire to be “innocent” slightly sexualized, etc etc. The more I looked at Anime and all the people around me imitating it, the more I realized that there are other styles and ways to draw things which are just as effective.

But try as I might, changing my style proved to be VERY difficult. I had been drawing Anime for so long that I didn’t know how to alter it without completely ruining the stuff I liked about all my characters. I realized that rather than learning the tools of the trade, I had forgone a lot of the technical knowledge I needed to draw in my efforts to copy a foreign style. Anime had, in fact, corrupted my ability to draw anything.

And it’s worse now than I ever dreamed it would be. Just take a peek at the frontpage of DA and see how much Anime and Manga influenced artwork gets attention and praise from everyone. It’s almost impossible to find artwork in a style which HASN’T in some way been influenced by Anime and Manga. I’m not trying to say that Anime and Manga is EVIL, but I do feel that we’ve become over-saturated with it to the point that it’s actually becoming detrimental to our collective growth as artists.

So yes... There is a bit of a hypocrisy going on here. Having me complain about Anime and Manga is hypocritical because I, too, was influenced by it (although I think you can see other styles in my work Anime and Manga was probably the biggest influence I had as a kid). But that doesn’t mean that I can’t recognize my own shortcomings and realize how much we desperately need to move away from Anime and Manga and create more individualized and personal drawing styles instead of just copying the norm.

And just for the record, if this were hypothetically reversed and Disney was more popular than Anime, I would be saying the same thing only about moving away from Disney. Its not specifically Anime and Manga I hate, it’s the over saturation effect it’s had on us and our artwork
Funny thing is, Disney's been working with a sorta-anime style since the 90s on their films. And several of their shows from that era (mid-80s to 1999 or thereabouts) were worked on by companies from Japan, who's credits also include stuff like Gundam, Detective Conan (aka one of his then "favorite" anime) and even Attack On Titan.

So yeah, shows how much he knows about Disney and the Japanese. Or really anything, for that matter.
 
A bit old but that tweet where he mentions that he "hates inking", good God man! I bet there are professional artists out there that don't find a part of the creative process pleasant, but they don't go out and broadcast it to the world for potential clients or employers to see. Image if he where to apply for an actual art job but the only position available is that of an inker? A lot of companies really look into the online "footprint" of job candidates. Who do you think is going to get the job? The artist that hates inking but shut ups about it or the guy that says he actually HATES inking?

Also, that "Korrasami" animation, A+ for effort Dobson, too bad that even such a pet project for him is being done so poorly, the characters are completely off model and I could forgive this if it were an animation from an amateur, not from someone with a formal education and a degree in animation. Furthermore, plenty of people have joked about Dobson being stuck in the 90s, but why on Earth does he have to make this animation as if technology had not advanced since then. Using paper, pencils and a scanner, instead of drawing directly on a tablet, dafuq?!
 
Retweet: Dobby, I don't think this is something you have to worry about.

With how much he bitches about doing artwork, and the fact that half the time he can't be arsed to do it, I doubt anyone meaningful would bother contacting him. A potential employer would just have to Google his name, and they'd see how much he hates doing art. There are better, more eager artists out there to pick up.
 
Ver archivo adjunto 43726

"This actually happened at my last convention. I was just chatting with a fan and made a comment about how hilarious I thought it was when people freak out over insanely trivial things (like the color of Link’s hair or my views on Ocarina of Time)

Or how about throwing a chair at someone over Harry Potter spoilers?

Or flipping out at your girlfriend's Jewish family because muh Christmas?

Or getting fired for flipping off your boss for being asked to do your job?
 
Or how about throwing a chair at someone over Harry Potter spoilers?

Or flipping out at your girlfriend's Jewish family because muh Christmas?

Or getting fired for flipping off your boss for being asked to do your job?
And he's the one with issues over Link's hair, no less
 
I wonder if Dobson actually applies for any artist jobs or just expects someone to see his art and hire him?
He applied for that Steven Universe storyboard job, but I feel like that was a special act for him.
 
I wonder if Dobson actually applies for any artist jobs or just expects someone to see his art and hire him?
He applied for that Steven Universe storyboard job, but I feel like that was a special act for him.
He said he was thinking about it. Then comment on "what's the point? People will just troll me". So there's no telling if he actually did.
 
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