New York TimesFriday, August 12, 2011As Rating Nose Dive Blogger Comes Under FireDespite a new round of terror attacks on American soil and a tenfold increase in U.S. military deaths since 2010, cable news ratings continue to plummet, according to the latest Nielsen ratings.At the bottom is upstart Global News.The self-titled "extreme news" network has been critcized for its unorthodox programming, including live broadcasts of Mexican migrants being electrocuted by the U.S. Border Wall.But no move has surprised media watchers more than naming an obscure left-wing blogger as its Baghdad correspondent.Jimmy Burns, who rocketed to stardom after videotaping the suicide bombing of a Brooklyn Starbucks, has come under fire from media critics from across the political spectrum.The New York Post called Burns "an America-hating deer in the headlights."The Nation wrote, "The ill-informed yet cocky Burns might be best suited for a job in retail."An executive at Global News' parent company, Lockheed Martin, told the Times the twenty-five-year-old neophyte's days at the network "could be counted on your fingers of one hand."
Shooting War creator and writer Anthony Lappé is Executive Editor of GNN.tv, the web site for the Guerrilla News Network. He is the co-author of their book True Lies (Plume) and the producer of their award-winning Showtime documentary about Iraq, BattleGround: 21 Days on the Empire’s Edge. He has written for the New York Times, the Huffington Post, New York, Vice, and Salon, among many others, and has been a producer for MTV News and Fuse.
I was surprised how little I enjoyed this book. Despite not being all that old, it has aged poorly and doesn't hold up well at all. Though I think my biggest issue was that the central character was unlikeable and tended to spaff supposedly profound monologues which consisted of the level of analysis you'd typically only hear from edgy fifteen year olds. I also found the art style of the comic book a bit odd, where real images and digital drawings were combined. At times it worked well and created a nice blend of reality and art but on some panels it looked a bit like it was hacked together on MS Paint. As for the story itself, it was very silly, despite it taking itself deadly serious.
A little too “macho” for me. The sex scene and naked lady pics did nothing to further the story. It’s too bad this ridiculous “guy’s guy” set up distracted from the book, as there was some interesting commentary on US foreign policy and the current state of journalism. The artwork was cool - I’m not usually the biggest fan of digitally drawn stuff, but I liked the real photos mixed in.
Indie blogger Jimmy Burns is first on the scene at a bombed out Starbucks and, thanks to the right-wing corporate media, becomes a star. Then he's off to Iraq to discover the truth and regain his soul. Along the way Jimmy has unfufilling sex with a writer from New York Magazine and pals around with a cartoon Dan Rather. What's not to like?
I picked this book up cheap at the same time I picked up "War is Boring," another graphic novel that covers journalists in war zones. This, rather than an autobiographical account, is a fiction that takes place in the near future at the time of writing. That happens to be in 2011, which is in our own exciting past.
In this alternate universe, John McCain was elected president, and has fully committed our armed forces to countless hot spots across the globe, most notably in Iraq. That would not seem much worse than the 2011 we had anyway, except for vastly more competent terrorists in this fictionalized world.
There were parts of this book I liked, and much that I did not. The bloodshed was wanton, but I suppose that goes with the story. I thought the sexual encounter and the 'revealing' art to be gratuitous and more intended to lure a few extra readers than add anything to the plot (It also reminded me of the movie, "Thank You for Smoking"). But none of that was what really hurt "Shooting War."
I guess it was the whole premise that a blogger would somehow reset our moral compass by showing how evil and murderous the US military was in Iraq, and by extension, the rest of the world. Jimmy Burns, the blogger/protagonist, is well-placed to do so, whether by some uncanny sixth sense or by being well-manipulated by others.
It's interesting to read this now, having seen the world we have following McCain's defeat by the junior US Senator from Illinois. It's hard to believe that a President McCain would have made our country so much more cruel and despotic. Tell it to the drones, eh?
The title of the book is called shooting war by Anthony Lappe and Dan Goldman. It's a graphic novel about global war terror taking place in baghdad iraq. The book is constantly moving. First we are in the city of brooklyn where the starbucks got blowin up then we ended up in another country filming media with the military in Baghdad iraq. The part that mostly stood out to me is when they were taking on the enemy first but the enemies saw that they were the media and said, “ tv good tv good we go”. I felt that it stood out to me because the enemies had mercy for the media which in my head i thought i was crazy because they actually had mercy for them. If you are looking for a book about war and action you'll probably enjoy all of the action scenes inside this book. I would recommend this book because it is mostly action filled and it has lots of shooting scenes and it involves the arm. I would give this book 4 out of 5 stars because it has lots of action but some of the parts they just talked a little too much.
un ottimo esempio di come si possa realizzare una graphic novel dai contenuti forti senza mortificare l'attenzione per le immagini (che stranamente ricordano quelle di "dmz", di burchielli e wood, e non è la sola similitudine...).lettura lettura obbligatoria per chi cerca le frange più politiche del fumetto contemporaneo, ma chi cerca un fumetto più "classico" e non è interessato all'argomento potrebbe restare deluso...
(Reprinted from the Chicago Center for Literature and Photography [cclapcenter.com]. I am the original author of this review, as well as the owner of CCLaP; it is not being reprinted here illegally.)
So Chicagoans, did you know that our public library system is starting to make grown-up graphic novels more and more an acquisitional priority, based I guess primarily on customer suggestions? Here's one, for example, that I recently found on the "new" shelf of my own neighborhood library, Anthony Lappe and Dan Goldman's Shooting War, a supposed black comedy/political thriller concerning bloggers, political wars held in third-world lands, and the world of instant media fame we now live in, which I picked up because of hearing it favorably mentioned at a number of places I respect. But now that I've read it myself, I have to plainly wonder just what manuscript those other places read; because as much as I hate being mean and obvious here at the blog (and really, I do), I have no other choice seemingly but to say that the writing on display here is just terrible, it's just f-cking terrible. It's crude, obvious, juvenile, chock-full of ridiculously simplistic political points, the exact thing you expect when a visually gifted artist decides to do a full-length book but has no decent full-length story to base it on. And that's a real shame, because I'm a huge long-time fan of ACT-I-VATE, the independent online comic-artist collective that Goldman is a founding member of, and wanted very badly to be a champion of this latest full-length project of his; but the fact is that I simply cannot be in this case, that Shooting War is one of those projects that makes non-fans laugh at cocktail parties whenever snotty creative-class web-development a--holes try to convince them that they should take graphic novels seriously. Ooh, be wary of this one.
One of the more interesting recent trends in comic books has been the increasing politicization of the medium. Shooting War is another example of a comic book with a message: war is bad, and America and the mainstream media are bad too. In the interest of full disclosure the author's politics are not mine, but I do enjoy reading what others who may disagree with my politics think. While readers are going to decide for themselves what they think of Shooting War's politics, the illustrations are quite well done, and the way photo-realism is mixed with drawings is fascinating.
Shooting War fails in two areas. First, it's VERY preachy. This is another trend in recent comic books, from The Walking Dead, to Y, to The Authority, to Wanted. The author isn't content to share his point of view; he has to shove it right down the reader's throat. Personally, it made me choke. I much prefer a more subtle approach, where the author presents a point of view, and then lets the reader make his own mind up. Instead we get a President McCain excoriating the Republican Party. We get it, the author doesn't like Republicans. Does he need to be so overt and blatant? We see American soldiers as villains, needlessly killing innocents, and being callous and cruel. Again, we get it, America is just the worst. The other issue is timeliness. Since the book was drawn, the situation in Iraq has drastically changed. Some dissident literature ages well, and long outlives the war or political issue it was originally created to protest. This isn't the case with Shooting War. Shooting War is an interesting experiment, but the long-winded and preachy dialogue ensures that it won't be remembered as a great read.
Set in an alternate universe (book came out in 2008 and is set in 2009) where McCain is the President of a US under constant terrorist attack and the war in Iraq is both worse and more technologically advanced, Shooting War follows an independent blogger turned mainstream journalist. Except he isn't a journalist at all. He researches nothing, is told where to be and simply points his camera at things happening and gets renoun somehow.
But the problem with this book isn't the passive protagonist (though it is annoying), it is in the painful caricatures, the long winded speeches and the lazy satire. I was honestly amazed that one of the writers is a journalist, given how painfully unaware this book seemed to be. That this is meant to be a critique of the media shows how deep the problem is--even the critics are uninformed, motivated by painfully partisan beliefs and incapable of understanding subtlety and nuance. Further, the narrative is very herky jerky, moving in time, location and logic in a way that makes little sense, as if entire sections were removed at the last moment and the seams couldn't be stitched in a logical manner.
The art is sometimes strong, often times mediocre and sometimes terrible. The meshing of photos with art are particularly gruesome affairs, with no seeming logic behind when a scene is rendered or reproduced, and the integration of the effects is laughable at best. It makes the book come off as a print equivalent of B-movie special effects.
It's a shame, really. This book has a lot going for it, but it falls in on itself.
Read by Lacey, Spring 2007: "This graphic novel is explicit and vulgar in nature and suggested audience should be from 15 years of age and older. This novel is about Jimmy Burns, a reporter who is asked to go and find out things that are going on in Baghdad. Directly from their website comes this plot introduction: "The year is 2011, and Jimmy Burns, a young anti-corporate blogger has just seen his Williamsburg apartment blown to bits by yet another terrorist attack on New York City. He's recorded the gruesome scene on his videoblog camera footage Burns beams live to a freaked-out world and that makes him an overnight media sensation. Exploited by his own network (Global News: Your home for 24-hour terror coverage), enraged by the terrorists, and determined to tell the American people the truth, Burns takes off for Iraq to get the real story of a war that's been raging for more than eight years." I wouldn't suggest this book for students in middle school or early high school, but late high school (11-12th grade) would be ok. I think that it is important to note that if I were to teach, this wouldn't be in my teaching plans whatsoever. As far as a teaching set, probably anything having to do with current events or history and how it repeats itself. "
I read this book in one night, right after watching V for Vendetta for a 3rd time. Whereas V for Vendetta the movie takes places in a dystopian near future United Kingdom dominated by a fundamentalist Christian militant government, Shooting War is a graphic novel set in the very very near future, almost now, where John McCain is President, the war in Iraq continues and gets worse and worse, and American journalism continues its downward spiral into irrelevance. Beautifully illustrated, frightening in its plausibility, this book is a loud call to my fellow Americans, that the violent world described within is just around the corner if we let it happen. If we don't hold the media accountable for actually investigating rather than reporting government propaganda, if we don't pressure Congress to end the war in Iraq, and if we allow the Republicans to run our discredited foreign policy once again. The American neo-con war drums against Iran are getting louder every day, and soon they'll tell us Iran has WMDs. As George W. likes to say, "Fool me once...."
In a possible near future, a blogger becomes a celebrity when his live webcam captures a terrorist explosion at a Starbucks in Williamsburg. President McCain's son, a soldier, is captured in Iraq, where a full-fledged civil war spirals out of control. A bombing of a Mexican oil refineries threatens America's dependence on oil. Meanwhile the Great Wall of Texas continues to be built on the border. The blogger, hired by Lockheed Martin's new media company, is pressured to capture more exclusives live from Baghdad. He soon becomes demonized by all sides, but has a knack for being in the right place whenever there is a massacre. Lappe's satiric graphic novel was published last November, when it looked like McCain had no chance. He also includes in the mix Pres. Raul Castro and a certain war with Iran. Damn.
Described by its makers as a work of political satire. Shooting War is a graphic novel form essay on a speculative near future of media monopoly and the ongoing war in Iraq. Blackly humorous and striking in its plausability. The events it portrays lie only a few years in our future... I'm rather morbidly curious to see how true they turn out to be. Sometimes artists can predict the future better than those who get paid to appear on news shows and try that game. The Ex have a lyric on an album that came out in April of 2001 "no chance to wait for things to change/ unless buildings get hit by planes"... creepy a bit?
"While making a video for his anticorporate blog, rugged Jimmy Burns serendipitously films a terrorist bombing at a Brooklyn Starbucks. Hired by a sensationalistic cable-news network—"The terrorists don't sleep and neither do we"—he lands in Iraq, where President McCain is continuing the troop surge. Burns unwittingly publicizes a revenge beheading; befriends a sage, flak-jacketed Dan Rather; and dallies with online groupies. Goldman's desert-landscape screen-grabs and kinetic graphics rush to keep pace with Lappé's balls-out script." -- VIllage Voice
I first read this when it was a serialized web comic. The story is a hauntingly realistic portrayal of the mess the US will be in through our continued occupation of foreign land. The graphics are fantastic and the ideas expressed even better. I can't wait for the next edition.
PS- I also like them because they linked back to my blog. Little things like that make me happy as a clam.
PPS- How happy are clams? How would one gauge their happiness? For that matter, how could you tell if they were unhappy?
Holy Schnikees!! I haven't read a story this engaging in a while! Lappe presents this graphic novel as a social and political satire, including some pretty hilarious bits that refer to corporate America and George Bush (who I voted for but can be objective about) as well as some very sobering illustrations of what war does to community and to our sense of altruism. Lappe's writing style is quite tongue-in-cheek while also carrying a compelling storyline. I'm curious now to read more of his work!
Written as a commentary on the present and future of journalism, this near-future graphic novel explores a videoblogger's experiences in Iraq. The book began as a webcomic. It's interesting to compare the web-based version with the print version. Both combine some interesting visual elements combining ink drawings with digital photographs and other images. Intended for mature readers (ages 16+), the comic format is filled with violence and profanity to make its point.
I found Shooting War to be a very entertaining read. Kind of scary near future foretelling of a possible President McCain and $150 a barrel oil. Pretty good since it was written about two years ago.
It tries to walk the balance between humor and some very serious subjects (war, murder, destruction) unsuccessfully at time which is why I gave it three stars. The biggest example of this was the "Sword of Mohammed" leader. I felt he was a little over the top.
Story was super compelling, but the art was muddled and sometimes inconsistent which only really bothered me after I put the book down. Might have been more stars if it wasn't so darn focused on a hipster-y reader. I have to say the cover was super compelling though, even if I assumed the book was about a photographer rather than a video-blogger. The latter choice was much more original, as was this whole story.
Not a fan of this book, entirely because I felt the writing was ham-handed overall and I didn't find the artwork appealing (and I usually like stencil/graffiti-inspired stuff). I'm very much sympathetic to the book's general view on the handling of the Iraq war, collusion of the media, and interest in grassroots media, but liberally sprinkling the dialog and imagery with anti- McDonald's and Starbucks references just made me feel like I was reading a lesser bit of agitprop from Adbusters.
Technically, I shouldn't really put this on my read shelf, since I couldn't finish this graphic novel a few months ago (hence the one star). Art was underwhelming and sometimes just plain weird looking (i.e. proportions could be very wonky). Story was so single minded and overly opinionated that it completely overwhelmed the important issues it was trying to explore. Combine with the totally unlikable, media whore main character, and you've got one disappointing book.
Another kid book, grabbed from the 12yo. Purports to be political commentary on news media, Iraq, etc. Falls short, but not bad. Perhaps appropriate for the kid who checked it out from the library. A near future fantasy, President McCain, CNN is still CNN but Foxnews has morphed into the Global News Network. Photoillustration style employed at times is interesting.
SHOOTING WAR has some faults, including a protaganist who is difficult to like. But it's been one of the few major comics to directly tackle modern politics and wars with a sense of extreme urgency. At times, SHOOTING WAR feels like it should be illegal in some counties and that's what makes it work.
The story was engrossing, but I didn't really like the protagonist. It's also weird reading anti-Bush sentiment now that he's gone. It's so 2007, you know (which is when the book came out)... The story was decent but seemed like it was trying to hard. Art was hit and miss. I don't always like the drawing mixed with photography style.
A masterful prescriptive jeremiad, set in a future too close for comfort, about an antiestablishment blogger thrust into the frontlines of war reportage after a suicide bomber blows up a Starbucks in Brooklyn. A pensive and often horrifyng commentary on our current situation in the Middle East, with some pointed extrapolations on media culture.
All of my Internet-addicted, quarter-life, left-leaning and anti-war folks out there are going to love Shooting War. I know I did. Seriously, go out and get this now.
ETA: My husband wanted to make sure readers know that the AK-47s were drawn improperly; the safety was on the wrong side.
Inexperienced journalist thrust into a war zone in a plausible near future world at war. Yes, sounds a lot like Brian Wood's terrific series, DMZ. The comparison was hard to shake though this book has enough going for it to stand on its own. There's a lot of good satiric commentary at play here as President McCain tries to dig out of Iraq and new terrorists threats.