COLD HARD FLASH
Flash Empowers
Mar
21
2005

The Wire’s Flash Article

posted by aaron, 6.08 PM

A small New Hampshire newspaper called ‘The Wire’ recently ran a cover article titled ‘Flash Nation: How a new generation of animators are changing cartoons.’ It’s a fantastic read, starting with an overview of how Flash came to be, then running through the dot-com era and on up to the current slate of on-air and web-based animation. There’s a handful of revealing quotes, and the author, Larry Clow, offers up a bevy of great links and references to recent Flash projects, including Jib Jab’s ‘This Land,’ Fat Pie’s ‘Salad Fingers,’ and the internet series ‘College University.’ This man has obviously done his homework, and his 3,000 ode to the Flash animated revolution is an inspiring read.

Below are a few of my favorite quotes from the article:

Long a staple of college kids and bored cubical dwellers who pass links to Flash sites around in e-mails, Flash animation is starting to hit the big time.Legions of amateur auteurs are using Flash to drive the animation revolution. Like a tiny digital snowflake, each Flash short is unique.

The inhabitants of Flash Nation are a strange lot, but it’s a story as old as the Web–put the means of production in the hands of the people, and they will make weird, weird stuff.

Flash is the future, they say, an emerging medium that, already enjoying a ubiquitous presence on the Web, is poised to take over TV, DVD and everything else.

“Flash has made it to the mainstream,” said Nicholas Da Silva.

“With Flash, you’re able to produce something at half the cost,” Da Silva said. “The cost of the software isn’t as expensive as high end software for animation. One or two people can have a studio at home and crank out their own stories.”

“You can do everything in Flash, without the overhead,” he said. “One person could be a studio, two people can develop a great concept.” (Jeremy Clough)

“Flash is just another animation tool. It’s what you make of it. I don’t think hand-drawn art of any kind will ever die. There will always be new toys, but there’s no substitute for the fundamentals,” (Kirk) Millett said.

Though there’s no agreement on the future of traditional animation, there is an almost unanimous opinion that Flash is democratizing cartoons.


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