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50 Light-Hearted Comics With A Sudden Twist By Yanni Davros
Interview With ArtistMillennials, Gen Z, and boomers fighting, presents from Santa, and shopping—these are some of the topics of Yanni Davros, the mastermind and well, the pen, behind Prolific Pen Comics.
Inspired by real-life people and situations, Yanni draws fun comics that can brighten up anyone’s day and make us nod in agreement. Especially when it comes to the notorious nail clipping aiming straight for your face as you do your nails, your dog digging in your backyard, or trying out the new air fryer. Bored Panda reached out to Yanni to have a chat and a few laughs, which you can read in the article as you vote for your favorite images.
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Yanni, a 33-year-old professional artist living in Sacramento, California with his girlfriend Niki and his dog Sai, is super into gardening, vinyl record collecting, cycling, snowboarding, and, of course, art. He got into drawing when he was around 3 years old and naturally gravitated to the pencil and basically never put it down as he got older. “I started by drawing airplanes and then got interested in painting and comics as a teenager. I was lucky enough to have supportive parents and I went to art school at the Savannah College of Art and Design, where I learned about art history and majored in sequential art.” And now, he makes his living doing art for tech corporations and advertising agencies.
The artist gets the inspiration for his comics from real life, people, and situations that he observes in the world and in his social circle. “My social circles are best because they are unique to my own experiences and give my work a genuine voice. I’m also pretty influenced by some of the absurdist comedy that was pretty popular in film and television in the '80s and '90s when I was growing up. It seems like more realistic, relatable comedy has grown in popularity since, so I try and pepper in a little of that too, but I would say my core comedy style is absurd and goofy. My art style, on the other hand, is influenced by newspaper comic strips like Peanuts, and Calvin and Hobbes.” He also loves kawaii art from Japan, like the Sanrio characters or Tokidoki characters, so there’s a little of that in his work as well.
There are four main characters in his comics: Olive, Teal, Fuchsia, and Violet, as he names all his characters after colors. “They are millennials with very different personalities and all trying to stumble their way through life. I also have a growing cast of supporting characters from various other age groups like kids, seniors, and parents, so I can lampoon a wider array of people and generations. I also love animal characters, especially bugs. My favorite is Rolly Polly, a socially shy pill-bug, which was also a fan favorite. He got popular enough for me to spin off into a side comic called 'Under a Rock' last year. I had to take a break from writing that one but I hope to return to it someday.”
“I am trying to reach anyone who wants a laugh or to think about the world around them differently. I think comics are the superior storytelling medium. In a way, they are the simplest, most abstract way to combine words and pictures to evoke an emotion. I want to eventually publish books,” shared Yanni.
Boomers love Facebook? Aren't they the ones complaining about technology?
45yo and more represent the majority of Facebook's users nowadays, IIRC
Load More Replies...As a millenial I can say its mostly true for us. The thing is that most millenials used facebook as teenagers.. Like a lot. And then all the news about privacy issues came up and it becamw one big advertisment space. I would say we had fun there once but now most people only use it for communication and are conscious about the privacy issues and angry with the ads.
I'm a millennial and I deleted my Facebook in 2016. I never looked back. Best decision I ever made to be honest.
Lots of younger Gen Xers looking more like the Millennials & Gen Zers these days, tho. There's some blurring/overlap in the generational attitudes.
I'm Gen X and I can confirm most of my generation is on FB. Our kids (Gen Z) would NEVER use it though, it's so uncool compared to say, TikTok (which we Gen X find rubbish)...Boomers? Not that many either: if they use it, they don't use it much. Not sure about Millennials though, I don't know enough of them lol. Instagram for them maybe?
Millenial here - all my friends are on facebook. We used it a lot as teenagers, then most of the people around me stopped using it frequently, now everybody uses it for communication with others only.
Load More Replies...Genx'er here; line facebook (the company AND the users) up against a wall and ready, aim, fire!
lol i have to disagree with the millenial one. they're more like WE HATE FACEBOOK then spend hours on it
I would say millenials are mostly conscious of the downsides of it. We, millenials, used facebook a lot as teenagers. Now most people realized sharing your personal data and most people stopped using it in the original way. Most people use is only for communication with others now.
Load More Replies...hold up. doesn't gen z like live on instagram, which is owned by facebook?
ohhh i feel that so hard (my family doesn't like my taste in music ;-;)
"Blackmail your opponents to establish dominance" -Sun Tzu, The Art of War
stereotyping the mafia as bad people is bad now?? we're both talking about the criminal organization right robert?
bet they can find that faster than my PACKAGE THAT I ORDERED 2 MONTHS AGO
These were pretty cute, but all these comic posts have the same name for some reason...
These were pretty cute, but all these comic posts have the same name for some reason...