Something Positive

Something Positive

Something Positive logo, "Mr. Personality."
Author(s) R. K. Milholland
Website http://www.somethingpositive.net
Current status / schedule Updating Daily
Launch date December 19, 2001 [1]
Genre(s) Dark humor

Something Positive or S*P is a webcomic by R. K. Milholland, which debuted on December 19, 2001. The comic is characterized by a cynical tone and off-beat humor, including its portrayals of geeks, gamers, and goths.

S*P received a Web Cartoonist's Choice Award in 2005 for "Outstanding Character Writing,"[2] in 2006 for "Outstanding Dramatic Comic",[3] and has been nominated in seven additional categories spanning five years since 2002.[4][5][6][7]

Contents

Drawing style

Milholland's drawing style has changed dramatically since the strip began in 2001, and has generally leaned towards simplicity. After a while he also started using 'paint blotch' backgrounds in some comics as a substitute for actual scenery.

Cast

The comic's main characters are Davan MacIntire, Aubrey Chorde, PeeJee Shou, and Jason Chorde (formerly Pratchett). The supporting cast includes Davan's immediate family (Fred and Dahlia MacIntire) and his adopted sister Monette Donelly. Other cast members include Choo-Choo Bear, Davan's boneless cat, Pepito, the enigmatic Spanish-speaking love-midget, and PeeJee's gay friend Jhim. These lesser cast members appeared more frequently in the first two years of the comic, but in recent years their prominence in the story line has diminished.

Secondary characters

  • Choo-Choo Bear is also used in some non-canonical comics, often one-shots, or as a "host" for reading fanmail or other unusual events. In these, Choo-Choo Bear wears a smoking jacket and lashes out at the readers, often making snide comments about them or R.K. Milholland and expressing a rather ego-maniacal personality. These panels never have any effect on the storyline of the comic, with the exception of the one that introduced his cousin, Twitchy-Hug. Choo-Choo and Twitchy are also the comic's only Jewish cast members.
  • Originally, Milholland had decided to give Davan a long-suffering stray who would turn up dead two years into the comic. Then he decided that the comic's cat would be a devious and evil being owned by one of Davan's neighbors. He deliberately gave the character "the goofiest name an evil being could possess," "Choo-Choo Bear," to create contrast with its malice and the genuine threat would pose to Davan's health.[22] Some of these ideas were retained for the character Twitchy-Hug.

Minor and irregular characters

Non-characters

Setting and storyline

The main cast lives in some unspecified location in Boston, the MacIntire family lives in Bedford, Texas, and Monette has recently moved with Lisa to West Hollywood, California. The comic will often switch between these locations, with related story lines, as well as go back in time. This most often occurs with the MacIntires and the earlier life of Davan, but has happened to explain the circumstances that brought the main three characters together. S*P has done multiple crossovers with Queen of Wands, the first of which involved a baby-sitting mishap with Choo-Choo Bear, one with Scandal Sheet!, and more recently one with Girls With Slingshots. Milholland has been known to use his comic as a forum for responding to irritating email, and has more than once satirized his own comic in the process of making a point. Many targets and groups are mocked- opinions Milholland himself disrespects are usually derided in-comic.

S*P is largely based on the personal experiences of the cartoonist. All of the main cast has some real life basis: many of them are directly based on real people, while others combine qualities from multiple specific people. According to the FAQ, around 65-70% of the comic is based on real life experiences, although toward the beginning it was closer to 90%. However, Milholland has recently commented that the characters now have only the barest relation to the people they were once based on. Moreover, the character's opinions are not his own. He has stated "I find it funny when detractors claim Davan is who I think people should be and is "cool" - it proves they've never spoken to me or done a bit of research. Davan's an asshole and a lot of the misery he's gone through, he brought on himself."

Unlike many webcomics featuring players of role-playing games, it is not a gaming comic. The gamers that do appear are usually stereotypical D&D nerds (when Milholland does publish a gag D&D monster, it is in the 3rd edition format), who cannot function socially — but others do appear who are portrayed more positively.

Storylines revolving around low-budget or no-budget theater are also common, some drawing on Milholland's experiences in the Boston theater scene. Most notorious among these was the storyline about Nailed!, a musical about the crucifixion of Jesus in the vein of Jesus Christ Superstar, but done in a manner which is irreverent and highly offensive (including a scene where Mary Magdalene does a pole dance on the cross). Many of the secondary Boston characters are loosely based on people in Boston's improvisational theater and sketch comedy community.

S*P, unlike many comic strips with their episodic "gag-a-day" format, takes a linear, storyline-based approach. Subject matter ranges from the main characters' adventures (both present and past) to contemporary commentary to political statements, and often makes its points in scathing and offensive fashion: for instance, in the debut strip, the strip's main character offers his opinion of an ex-girlfriend by giving her a coat hanger as a baby shower present (alluding to its use as an instrument in back-street abortions). However, the strong friendships shared by the main characters inject occasional bouts of hope (and certainly have greater dramatic impact through their rarity).

A major theme in the comic is romance and relationships. The vast majority of the cast is either unlucky in love (particularly Davan, as his only 'good' relationship ended when Branwen moved away), in sometimes strained relationships (Monette and Lisa have had several trials and tribulations), or happy together in spite of each other (Fred and Faye had a wonderful, if sometimes sarcastic, relationship, and Aubrey and Jason have a marriage that seems similar to Fred and Faye's relationship). Most romantic dalliances, however, end badly.

Time frame

The strip is set in semi-realtime: That is, a year in the strip will be released over the course of a year; however, a plot arc might start out several days before it is set, then conclude on the supposed day. There are also frequent flashbacks to the past, which also come with dates.

Even with its fixture in time, the comic does not make much effort to connect with day-to-day real-life events (exceptions include the Aqua Teen Hunger Force ads that disrupted Boston). Politics are dodged if possible, apparently because Millholand "made a promise to [his] dad long ago to avoid certain topics".[37] An exception is an arc in mid 2004, when Aubrey tries to get Peejee to go with her to the 2004 Democratic National Convention so they can hand out Nader fliers.

Running gags

Spin-offs

Something Positive has spawned three official spin-offs: New Gold Dreams, Midnight Macabre and Something Positive 1937.

References

  1. ^ strip of December 19, 2001
  2. ^ "The 2005 Cartoonist's Choice Awards". Web Cartoonist Choice Awards. http://www.ccawards.com/2005.htm. Retrieved 2008-12-26. 
  3. ^ "The 2006 Web Cartoonist's Choice Awards 2006:Outstanding Dramatic Comic"". Web Cartoonist Choice Awards. http://ryanestrada.com/wcca/ceremony/dramatic.htm. Retrieved 2009-01-01. 
  4. ^ "The 2002 Cartoonist's Choice Awards". Web Cartoonist Choice Awards. http://www.ccawards.com/2002.htm. Retrieved 2008-12-26. 
  5. ^ "The 2003 Cartoonist's Choice Awards". Web Cartoonist Choice Awards. http://www.ccawards.com/2003.htm. Retrieved 2008-12-26. 
  6. ^ "The 2004 Cartoonist's Choice Awards". Web Cartoonist Choice Awards. http://www.ccawards.com/2004.htm. Retrieved 2008-12-26. 
  7. ^ "The 2007 Cartoonist's Choice Awards". Web Cartoonist Choice Awards. http://www.ccawards.com/2007.htm. Retrieved 2008-12-26. 
  8. ^ strip of February 8, 2003
  9. ^ strip of August 11, 2005
  10. ^ strip of January 27, 2006
  11. ^ strip of November 23, 2005
  12. ^ strip of February 9, 2006
  13. ^ strip of April 22, 2007
  14. ^ strip of December 31, 2001
  15. ^ strip of January 2, 2002
  16. ^ strip of January 28, 2003
  17. ^ strip of November 29, 2005
  18. ^ strip of December 16, 2002
  19. ^ strip of November 15, 2003
  20. ^ strip of January 14, 2002
  21. ^ strip of January 16, 2002
  22. ^ "Reader Q&A," July 5, 2009
  23. ^ strip of July 30, 2008
  24. ^ strip of November 19, 2008
  25. ^ March 4, 2010 strip discusses sexual relationship between Vanessa and Davan.
  26. ^ strip of December 6, 2006
  27. ^ strip of April 16, 2002
  28. ^ strip of February 5, 2006
  29. ^ strip of August 3, 2007
  30. ^ strip of May 24, 2006
  31. ^ strip of December 26, 2006
  32. ^ strip of January 13, 2007
  33. ^ strip of March 23, 2007
  34. ^ strip of January 21, 2008
  35. ^ strip of May 4, 2002
  36. ^ Munchkin 3 Clerical Error description on Steve Jackson's website
  37. ^ strip of October 19, 2006
  38. ^ strip of May 30, 2006
  39. ^ strip of October 8, 2006

External links