The 40 Most Popular Cartoon Brew Posts of 2015
Here’s a look at the animation stories that you clicked on the most during the last 12 months.
Here’s a look at the animation stories that you clicked on the most during the last 12 months.
Good news for men though: they directed 100% of American animated features released in 2015.
Even more concerning than a flop is where the studio is headed creatively.
Walt Disney was a Nazi! Who cares if it’s true or not?
Of the studio’s 16 films to date, no Pixar film has had a solo woman director, but Ed Catmull thinks that will change soon.
The most useless career advice you’ll ever get, courtesy of Nick Animation.
You’re not actually thanking artists if you delete their names from the credits.
Michael Dante DiMartino and Bryan Konietzko’s animated series convincingly broke Nickelodeon’s dudebro mold. Will they be the last?
Women don’t receive the same opportunities as men do in animation, and they’re finally speaking out about it.
Mexican-American cartoonist Lalo Alcaraz has often criticized the Disney company; now he is on their payroll.
The best answer you’ll ever hear to this question.
The families of artists often play a big role in maintaining the legacies of famous cartoon characters.
“Attacking something purely because it’s CGI is lazy.”
A dumb research study says that looking at round cartoon characters can make you obese.
An uninformed commentary about the visual effects industry goes viral.
Illumination Entertainment’s founder admits he has no idea what’s in store for the future of animation, but it will probably arrive online in short-form.
An investment analyst asked DreamWorks execs why they’d gone creatively astray; this is what they told him.
A filmmaker offers a few tips for festivals to attract animators—and ensure that they keep coming back.
The award-winning independent filmmaker drops some truth in this “Vanity Fair” interview.
John Lasseter says that Disney and Pixar will aim to increase diversity onscreen—and hopefully offscreen too.