Scott Bateman

Scott Bateman (born January 30, 1964) is a left-leaning political cartoonist residing in New York City (he moved there from Portland, Oregon in 2005). For a number of years, his political cartoons were syndicated by King Features Syndicate. After his syndication deal ended, he began the Bateman 365 project to publish a flash animated short every day for one year. On June 11, 2007, he announced that his video for Low's song Hatchet (Optimimi version) would be one of the preloads on the new Zune.[1]

Scott Bateman inadvertently takes a picture of himself in October, 2006

Bateman also created and produced "Scott Bateman Presents Scott Bateman Presents," for Plum TV, a network with stations in The Hamptons, Martha's Vineyard, Aspen and more. Three episodes aired in 2007. Bateman animated the entire production, as well as most of the writing, as well as voice performance. Guest voices included Kristen Schaal, Pete Holmes, Jenny Slate, UK band Clinic, and more. The show is on hiatus, but the episodes continue to run and the network uses many of the shorts interstitially between shows.

He is creating a daily animated short for Salon.com, uploading an animation to the site every weekday. Here, he has animated bits from The State (TV series) and Human Giant, news clips of Hillary Clinton and Chris Matthews, plus scenes from the 1960 horror film Atom Age Vampire (he hopes to have the entire film animated by the end of 2008) and more.

He graduated from the University of Puget Sound in 1986.[2]

Scott Bateman Presents Scott Bateman Presents

Scott Bateman Presents Scott Bateman Presents was an animated television show created and animated by Scott Bateman.

It aired January 8 to January 22, 2007 on Plum TV. Three episodes were completed before funding ran out.

Published works

  • The Lithium League
  • My Real Dad (2002)
  • SCAN (2003)
  • Scott Bateman's Sketchbook of Secrets & Shame (Word Riot Press, 2006)
  • Unruly magazine
  • Bateman 365
  • Disalmanac: A Book of Fact-Like Facts (Penguin Books 2013)[3]
gollark: Some technologies lead more easily to harm than others.
gollark: That sounds like another thing which is bound to have no negative consequences.
gollark: I don't have those. I just do computers. Besides, bioweapons could affect other people.
gollark: I would recommend against entering the field of bioweapon design.
gollark: I'm pretty sure lots of viruses cover themselves (partly) in marker proteins from human cells, so it's harder to deal with them.

References


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