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Winick, Judd : ウィキペディア英語版
Judd Winick

Judd Winick (born February 12, 1970) is an American comic book, comic strip and television writer/artist and former reality television personality. Winick first gained fame for his 1994 stint on MTV's ''The Real World: San Francisco'', before earning success for his work on comic books as ''Green Lantern'', ''Green Arrow'', and ''Pedro and Me'', his autobiographical graphic novel about his friendship with ''Real World'' castmate and AIDS educator Pedro Zamora. He created the animated TV series ''The Life and Times of Juniper Lee'', which ran for three seasons on Cartoon Network.
==Early life and career==
Winick was born February 12, 1970, and grew up in Dix Hills, New York. In his youth Winick initially read superhero comics, but this changed when he read Kyle Baker's graphic novel ''Why I Hate Saturn'', which in Winick said in a 2015 interview he still reads once a year. Winick also cites ''Bloom County: Loose Tails'' by Berke Breathed as the first collection of that strip that changed his life, one which prompted him to spend the next ten years "horribly aping" Breathed's style.〔Hoffman, Barbara (October 31, 2015). ("In My Library: Judd Winick" ). ''New York Post''.〕
Winick graduated from high school in 1988 and entered the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor's School of Art, intending to emulate his cartoonist heroes, including Breathed and Garry Trudeau. His comic strip, "Nuts and Bolts", began running in the school’s newspaper, the ''Michigan Daily'', in his freshman year, and he was selected to speak at graduation. The University published a small print-run of a collection of his strips called ''Watching the Spin-Cycle: The Nuts & Bolts Collection''. In his senior year, Universal Press Syndicate, which syndicates strips such as ''Doonesbury'' and ''Calvin & Hobbes'', offered Winick a development contract.〔Winick (2000). ''Pedro and Me''; pp. 16 – 18.〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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