This strip was originally posted on !gothindustrial@lemmy.world. That post involved the original in “four panels in a horizontal row” format as found on the internet, but it had several problems.

  • first there was a spelling mistake where it said “…sad an negative” instead of “…and…”. Not a big deal tho, maybe it was just an abbreviation like “dunno”?
  • that font makes a “G” look like a “6” or a “b”. I guess the word still makes sense in context, but it’s kind of annoying. Looking at it a bit closer, I’m pretty sure it’s a computer font rather than hand-lettered. So I edited all the "G"s to look like "G"s. and since it wasn’t hand-lettered and thus more likely a hastily-executed translation by a fan or underpaid assistant, I also changed “an” to say “and”. (I should say that the translation was well-done in terms of the words chosen tho; much better than in “Another Top”)
  • the strip is in traditional “four panels in a horizontal row” format. maybe this looks great in newspapers I dunno but it’s kinda hard to read online. The “Another Top” post re-framed this to “four panels in a vertical column” which looks gorgeous on a phone but has problems of its own on a computer. I think I understand now why so many web comics use the “four panels in a square” format, it seems like a nice compromise. In fact, if you look at the “nemi.no” URL, it forwards you to a facebook page where a couple strips have been rather sloppily cut into a square format. I’m not hating on whoever did the quick chop job, maybe they were fans or maybe the artist doing it herself in her spare time. But I think this strip deserves a better presentation, which is why I reformatted it thus.
  • the background is also made black, bc the white background just looks weird on a “dark theme” computer. Plus, it’s a cartoon about dark culture, lel. The trade-off is that if anyone wants to print out the strip, now they gotta print a lot of black ink. But I’m not sure… do people still print out cartoons these days?
  • Added the name of the strip and artist. I think the artist deserves a much higher profile in the US than she currently has. The line art of the goths in panels 2 and 3 is masterful, and the background goths in panels 1 and 4 show a perfect balance of minimalism and detail. Tellingly, the non-goths all look like caricatures of actual people rather than just generic cartoon characters. Importantly, this particular strip isn’t just going for a gag, it also aims to expess a truth about “dark culture” and its relationship to the world. Anyway I think the name of the cartoon and its artist deserves to be prominently placed on the image; this isn’t usually done on the images floating around the internet. (they often have the “nemi.no” url, but this forwards to a facebook page which doesn’t even mention the artist, and which only shows 2-3 entries before refusing to do any more unless you make a facebook account.)

Anyway, this was a great educational experience, it’s really instructive to interact with media in this way.

Nemi is a character from Norway by Lise Myhre. The strip is written in Norwegian but for a while it was translated and ran in England. The character is into metal, industrial, goth, and “dark culture” in general. For more info: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nemi_(comic_strip)

  • salacious_coaster@infosec.pub
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    20
    ·
    16 hours ago

    I honestly don’t get the widespread hate on bats. Like maybe vampire bats, sure; they’re ugly and suck blood. But tons of bats are freaking adorable.

    • underisk@lemmy.ml
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      19
      ·
      14 hours ago

      bats are fine, but I don’t want to be anywhere near them in the wild because they’re a rabies vector.

    • cecilkorik@piefed.ca
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      11
      ·
      15 hours ago

      I’m not sure about hate, but people have a pretty understandable aversion to them I would say. People don’t really have an opportunity to see or interact with normal healthy wild bats very commonly, and that’s probably a good thing. They are not really possible to be kept as pets and it is not really responsible to try. They aren’t popular at zoos because they are hard to keep in captivity and hard to exhibit as their activity schedule is pretty incompatible with ours. The bats people are most likely to interact with are rabid wild bats, because they are acting strange and erratic and unhealthy and end up in places and at times where humans will be in a position to interact with them. And they are, as you noted, freaking adorable, and they seem hurt or injured, so people will naturally be inclined to interact with them, and now they’re interacting with a rabid bat. This means if any typical human is typically interacting with a typical bat, there is a good chance they are about to get bitten and get rabies and have a really really bad time. Bats, therefore, don’t have a great reputation, because that’s how typical interactions with them usually play out.

      The bats going out and eating bugs at night while we’re all sleeping aren’t bothering or attracting the notice of anyone and the vast majority of people don’t even know they’re there beyond a vague understanding that they exist.

    • tomkatt@lemmy.world
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      18
      ·
      19 hours ago

      Yeah, high desert living. I don’t love the rain, but it ain’t bad, and we need it. Plus, it keeps the dust down for a bit.

  • Gork@sopuli.xyz
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    23
    ·
    20 hours ago

    They are happy because they finally were able to retake their land from the Romans.

  • trolololol@lemmy.world
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    5
    ·
    15 hours ago

    I didn’t read it all but it looks like you put a lot of effort into reformating it.

    I’d like to suggest that you also include a text description of it, for those who can’t see images and rely on text readers for accessibility.