Seth

Back for more 4 years later, after being my first guest ever, Seth and I seem to start right where our previous conversation left off. I am a really big admirer of Seth’s work, and this interview was very enlightening in new ways that I was not familiar with him before. Be sure to check out George Sprott, it’s pretty great.


November 6th, 2009 at 8:09 am
[...] This post was mentioned on Twitter by inkstuds and Faz Choudhury, sequential . sequential said: RT @inkstuds - two podcasts today - Genesis conversation - http://inkstuds.com/?p=2481 and Seth interview - http://inkstuds.com/?p=2483 [...]
November 6th, 2009 at 11:58 am
[...] busy two weeks over at Inkstuds — here are conversations with George Sprott: 1894-1975 author Seth (69.9MB), Ball Peen Hammer illustrator George O’Conner (42.1MB), Dolltopia author Abby Denson [...]
November 6th, 2009 at 7:37 pm
Social comments and analytics for this post…
This post was mentioned on Twitter by inkstuds: Whats this, two podcasts for you today - Genesis conversation - http://inkstuds.com/?p=2481 and Seth interview - http://inkstuds.com/?p=2483...
November 13th, 2009 at 11:25 am
It’s cut off! Will more be put online later, or did you run over time?
It’s a very good interview, by the way.
November 13th, 2009 at 1:09 pm
Seems to work fine for me, it should just be over 70 minutes.
December 9th, 2009 at 5:23 pm
seth sounds like and talks how his books read. he seems like his books…I know this doesn’t make any sense.
but thanks for the interesting interview. seth is an important cartoonist, for sure, and i enjoy some of this work.
December 9th, 2009 at 5:31 pm
also, more tangibly, i’d like to say that when seth talks around 40mins somewhere about huge canadian public figures from the past like pierre burton, being kind of hollow or buffoonish, i immediately understood what he was talking about. having done a considerable amount of academic research myself on canadian radio history, on the cbc in the 1960s and earlier, etc., I can say that some of these giants of television of radio, these big-voiced, straight-talking, no-nonsense men had the air of another time about them, but also that they seem very obviously to me to have been “characters” or to have had characters which they played to the public. an odd and apt observation by seth that i wanted to comment on.