ComicLab Ep 491 — Why don’t you do MORE?!?
What does it really mean when someone looks at your career and says, “You should be doing more”?
In this episode of ComicLab, Brad and Dave respond to a pointed listener question that cuts straight to the bone: If they have the skills, the experience, and the ideas — why haven’t they launched even more projects? The answer isn’t defensive or dismissive. Instead, it becomes a clear-eyed breakdown of creative bandwidth, sustainability, work-life balance, and the invisible labor that propels up a long-term comics career. From Patreon and newsletters to storefronts, commissions, podcasts, and family responsibilities, they unpack why “doing enough” is often misunderstood from the outside — and why restraint can be a strategic choice, not a lack of ambition.
The conversation then pivots to one of the trickiest problems any humor writer faces: How to judge your own work when readers don’t get the joke. How many confused comments are just statistical noise—and when do they signal a real problem in execution? Brad and Dave dig into the uncomfortable middle ground between ego and humility, exploring how to listen to feedback without letting it derail your voice, and how to improve clarity without sanding off what makes your work distinctive. It’s a nuanced, experience-earned discussion about ramps, chasms, audience expectations, and why “it happens to everyone” is not an excuse — but also not a death sentence.
If you’ve ever felt pressure to produce more, or struggled to decide whether reader confusion is a warning sign or just the cost of taking creative risks, this episode offers hard-earned perspective from two cartoonists who’ve been navigating those exact questions for decades.
Takeaways
- Creative projects often take a backseat due to time constraints.
- Cartoonists manage a heavy workload that includes multiple projects.
- Balancing creativity with administrative tasks is crucial for success.
- Feedback from readers can help improve comic writing.
- Self-editing is a continuous process for comic creators.
- Reader confusion can indicate a need for better communication in comics.
- Communication is key in the artistic process.




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